All rights reserved. The use
of any part of this publication, reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any
means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored
in a retrieval system without prior written consent of the publisher is an
infringement of copyright.

This is a work of fiction.
Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously.

White, J. K.

Love Cats

Printed and bound in Dublin.

Published by Tuttle House.

HE THOUGHT back to their
beginning as he sensed her at his side, hearing her whispered words and wishing
he could feel her heart beside his again. Oh to have that day back, that day
when everything had changed.

“Paul? Paul Goodman?”

“Yes?”

Myra Glass stood
in the doorway, twisting a recalcitrant strand of hair into a small knot
between her fore finger and thumb, her other hand clenching a sheaf of notes by
her side. “Yes, well, it won’t take long, but you’ve been put forward for
promotion—International Division. I need you to fill out an ap.” How her
blue eyes fidgeted with the world around her, her mouth in control yet not, her
words ringing like bells from her lips.

“I’m Myra. Myra Glass.” Myra.
If only he could return the past.

He had seen
her again that first day at a drinks party for Jan de Witt, who had been
learning the ins and outs of tele-banking at Green Bank’s main Buffalo office. Unabashed
by his obvious attempt to save her from the chattering accountants, as always
rattling on about rising and falling this and thats, he had gone up to her.
Hopeful.

“Did the
groundhog see his shadow?” he had asked.

“No, not yet, but
there’s hope. There’s always hope,” answered Myra, her sing-song words cueing in his head
again like bells. Hope.

He imagined
holding her as she twisted another string of blonde into a perfect loop, as if
by holding her he could somehow hold her fear. His fear? He thought how best to word an invitation, wondering
could he speak such thoughts so soon. But how could he at a business drinks
party for Jan de Witt? They had only just met.

As the morning
light crossed his face in streaks of confusion, Paul remembered next the Falls,
having finally screwed up the courage to ask her that day. “The Falls asleep in
snow,” he remembered Myra
saying as she smiled at his forwardness, “I’ve never been in the dead of
winter.” And soon they were there, arms dangling over the railing, dots of mist
connecting their faces, the bent perspective of their inclined torsos belying
danger. How lightly they spoke their lines—of life, of past and future, of
worlds colliding.

And then,
walking hand in hand, in the leaky caverns underneath, as they lingered behind
the tour, the teeny sweet guide gushing out the stream of numbers—“One hundred
thousand gallons per second. More water falling than anywhere in the world,
crashing with perfect certainty.” And finally, their first kiss, as the whole
of Niagara above stopped, their lips wetted
with mystery.

As the cold sun
blazed full in his eyes, Paul remembered each moment as if he was stuck in a
slo-mo dream. The office lights flickered through his thoughts in refractive
wonder. Had it been seven weeks since that day? Seven weeks.

His boss ducked
in. “Paul, I need the Friday report for the meeting,” said Wayne Templeton as
he fingered his watch before adding mockingly, “It was due Friday.”

“Sorry, I’m still
working out the numbers. I want to run them past the others—Frank from
Marketing, Mark from Head Office, April from PR. Can you give me an hour?”

Wayne Templeton
nodded. “Okay, an hour, but no more. And I’d like an answer to that other
matter we were discussing. Remember?”

Paul winced.
As if he could forget.

Maeve called
round soon after to remind him about the group outing after work. Had he
forgotten? Jane wondered if he was still playing squash.

Julia Reddy
dropped by next to finalize the ap. As Green Bank psychiatrist, her job was to
screen the undesirables, the malcontents, the not-yet-readys. A specialist in Freudian
and Jungian psychoanalysis with a Ph.D. in advanced transactional analysis
(Doctor Doctor), she could know something was wrong by the way one adjusted his
tie or pulled at her hair.

“Are you ready?”
Julia asked.

Paul shifted in
his chair, his eyes cast on the dark mole on the underside of her chin. The
cold sun beat through the wall of window behind her.

“Ready? Sorry?”
returned Paul, casually tucking the short end of his tie into his pants.

“Yes, well, I
imagine you have a lot on your mind. It’s a big step.”

“Yes, big step,”
nodded Paul.

Julia had a few
questions, just formalities. “You seem to have everything in order. Gus has
some legal work and you’ll have to do some training, but I see no reason why
Head Office in Washington
won’t approve. International Division. Very impressive.” She flipped
through the ap, scribbling notes in the margins as they talked, Paul studying
her face as she eyed his past in the folded-out pages of his life: 27, first in
his accounting class, a job at Green Bank straight out of college. True blue
American. “Seems fine,” she continued. “Everything okay otherwise? Happy? No
swings?”

“No. Nothing.”

“Are you sure? I
find that some accountants feel like machines lost in the confines of a big
bank, doing what they’re supposed to do instead of what they want to do. It’s
okay to let it out. Talk. Confess.” Julia Reddy’s mouth stretched sideways in a
smile. “How’s Myra?”

“Myra? Fine thanks,” said
Paul flatly, his heart quickening.

“Unh huh. Well, I think that about covers
it. I can’t imagine any problems.”

Julia Reddy
rolled up the ap into a tightened scroll, indicating with a casual tap the
direction of the door, before disappearing down the hall, her heels
click-clicking with each step.

Thinking he had
passed whatever test he had been given (he had spoken clearly, had said only
good things about his colleagues, and hadn’t appeared nervous), Paul relaxed,
his body unclenching as he surveyed the sky outside. The snow swirled in the
wind, Buffalo
alive now as if held captive in some giant snow globe. Well, she did ask about Myra. But, of course, she
would have had to ask.

Although there
had been no formal betrothal, no family gatherings (impossible in any case;
parents all dead), they had been together every day since they met, made all
the usual exchanges (flowers, chocolates, various particular stones and shiny
metals, lists of favorites, a few obvious hinted-at surprises, and two flower
tattoos only each other could see), and had said the word love twice (her first, followed by him, and again together sotto voce in the midst of an
adventurous afternoon amour). They had even planned a trip to Myra’s
sister Nell and family in the primrose path of Ithaca, but an hour’s drive along the
interstate. Everything had been going well—not yet in their thirties, living
their future, her ‘M’ and his ‘P’ monogrammed together in the yes of love. He
had every right to wonder.

He watched more
as the swirling snow outside stiffened, wondering not for the first time what
it would feel like to fall, surprising himself at how much he enjoyed the
image, his arms outstretched, buffeting himself as he passed each of Green
Bank’s thirteen floors, a body, compelled to fall in perfect double time, yet
ending, as always, with a thud, a splat, a news item above the fold.

Again he thought
back to their beginning: the Falls, the kiss, the line above her thigh where
the sun had dared not touch. He wondered was he to blame, remembering when he
had raised his voice, but she had been unreasonable, expecting him to change
his plans without notice. And of course they had argued that once when she
demanded he come to her after a night out with the boys. He had only been to
the casino on the Canadian side, big deal, out to midnight. But he had said no. Was that it? Was that why
she was being so uncooperative? Or was it all because of last night, when he
had joked about marriage, saying what he had said after she had first tested
the waters. Was that it? A slip? Was he forever to question the riddles of
love’s ups and downs?

He checked his
e-mail. There were nine, the first an ad for pheromones, a sticky substance
conveying natural body odor—“One jot of pheromones grabs women, turning them
into hot she-dogs.” “She dogs?”
chided Paul. “As if.” The second was a regular solicitation—“You may already be
a winner”—requesting that he, Mr. P. D. Goodman, preferred gold-star customer,
send $9.99 to P.O. Box 666, Twocowtown, Nebraska, attention Winner, to receive step-by-step
instructions … about setting up a mail-order business, telling others how they
may already be winners. E-mails 3 through 8 were all jackpot lottery wins, for
which, if he added them up, he had won over 100,000 million dollars, no
questions asked, provided he immediately send his bank details and biographical
information to the beneficent host institution (clearly marked as not the
sending institution). He laughed as he noticed the overly casual spelling of
‘lucky’ recipient as ‘licky’ recipient in one and Mr Goodman as Mr Godman in
another. As he opened the last e-mail, his adrenaline spiked.

Myra - Re: Tonight

Thank you for your note and the flowers you sent to me this morn. I
have thought about what you said last night. Perhaps, forever is too big a
step--day upon day, living ever more the same. I’m sorry. I thought a step to
more. Yes, we are young and in the small of time and, indeed, forever is so
much more. As for tonight, I’m sorry, but I told you I have this thing with
Warren Jones. Remember? … From Acquisitions and Mergers?

Regards, Myra.

So it was last
night, when he had taken her bubble gum ring and one-upped her on bended knee,
pretending to ask for her hand. But Warren
Jones from Acquisitions and
Mergers? Come on. And who
signs affection with regards?

After reading and
rereading Myra’s
e-mail for any supposed slant, he wondered had he missed a sign, overlooked the
obvious? The Falls, that carnal vortex entwined with the bliss of new tried
love—“Yes, yes, you are the one.” It had never been as good as that first time,
the two of them, rising and falling. 100,000
gallons per second. Had she forgotten already when they first said yes
together? Or had last night upended everything, when he had told her that he
had no intention of being tied together like all the others? Was that it? And
now, as if forever suspended in that moment, wishing he could somehow return
the past. When he had meant without meaning.

Outside, the snow
swirled faster. “Together. To-get-her,” he mused. Was he to wait, give her
time, each unrequited moment click-clicking in a hell of wishful thinking. Was
that it? Was he to give her space, to be both distant and near, to come and
go as a woman wanted? To be there, and
not? Was that it? How had the simplicity of their beginning become so
entangled?

He put on a good
face at the meeting. He was losing Myra
or had lost her he didn’t know. Wayne Templeton asked if he was okay, the
others wondering why he had been so quiet when his report was rejected. As they
talked on about increases in the decreases and shortening potentials in the
lengthening expectations, Paul drifted away, remembering again the Falls, and
when Myra had asked “If you knew the exact moment you were going to die, would
you live your life differently?” The way she smiled, having caught him out—a yes and she would ask why he didn’t, a no and she would say he was a liar.
“Imagine if you knew the time. Imagine if it was tomorrow.” He couldn’t think
to concentrate. To hold her again. To have her. To fall.

“I’m sorry to
reject the report,” said Wayne Templeton, “but the numbers predict a surplus
when we want a shortfall to put inflationary pressure on the weakening dollar.”

Paul was only
half listening as the others waited for him to answer. Even the snow, it
seemed, had slowed in wait. “Yes, sir,” Paul finally replied. “Shortfall.”

Wayne Templeton
continued, a gentle smile breaking across his face. “Paul, we can afford to be
patient and see what the Fed does. Remember, all good things come to those who
wait.” But Paul didn’t answer, as he gazed up instead at the clock hands, glued
together at twelve. The others nodded their agreement. To wait. To let the
world pass by. To never question silence, thought Paul.

“Yes, to wait. I
understand,” Paul finally answered.

And with that the
meeting was adjourned, the others piling out the moment Wayne Templeton had
cued the end. As Paul lingered, still unsure, Wayne Templeton asked him if he
had given any thought to the other
matter they had been discussing. They were idling by the door.

“Oh, I wouldn’t
think of it as spying,” said Wayne Templeton. “I only want you to pass
along any untoward behavior you might come across or overhear. You know,
suspicious activity in the normal course of a day. Can’t be too safe these
days.”

Not quite spy
versus spy, thought Paul, uncovering infidels, the Hun, code book in hand
behind the water cooler, blinking coordinates and jump parameters to his
commander-in-chief. But not his mission, nonetheless.

Wayne Templeton
fingered his tie, his authority ripening as he brought the two strands
together. He mentioned the promotion, the ap.
“Well, Paul, you let me know okay? … by Friday. I’ll be waiting.” After Wayne
Templeton trundled off, Paul was left alone, again, with the uncertainty of his
thoughts.

Suspicious
activity? Untoward behavior? What had that to do with accounting, wondered Paul
as he returned to his office? And how was he to get the numbers right if the
numbers were always changing? Where was the sense in that? And Myra, whose eyes and mouth
and face imploded in his head like an A-bomb, transmuting love, what had become
of her? Of them? How could everything have changed in a moment?

He fired off an
e-mail to the Green Bank president, William Connors, questioning how he could
report on numbers that were always changing. He knew he shouldn’t have, but
there it was, he had. He then sent another e-mail to Wayne Templeton, saying no
to that other matter—he would be no boss’s boy, no office snoop. In a
moment’s crush he even sent off a reply to the last lottery larcenist, thanking
him and asking for his bank details, so he could turn the tables to see
how that would stick in his craw. And then, instead of responding to the
e-mail, the one he hadn’t stopped thinking about since the moment he had
received it, the one from her, he walked the forty feet to her office.

Myra was typing at
her desk, her long blonde hair trailing behind her, her body erect and as noble
as the Sphinx. The daisies Paul had sent her that morning sparkled in a vase by
the window.

“I think you
owe me an explanation,” started Paul calmly, his nervousness he believed only
he could see. A sprig of sideways hair stuck out at a most peculiar angle.

“Paul, come on,
we’ve been through this. I told you,” said Myra. “Warren
asked me out long before I met you. It’s his grandmother’s 88th birthday.” Paul
jiggled from side to side on the balls of his feet as he listened.

“I’m not talking
about Warren,”
he interrupted, the words bunching together as he continued. “Last night, you
know I didn’t mean what I said. You know I was only joking.” But it was no use
as he tried to make sense, to undo, to go back, to begin anew.

“Paul, it has
nothing to do with … last night,” said Myra, her voice trailing uneasily.

That was when
the window broke.

Modern skyscraper
windows are constructed to resist any ordinary blow—otherwise there would be
many more tales of paperweights and the like falling from height—but, in this
instance, something had gone wrong and, before the paperweight could fall the
thirteen floors to the ground, the noise brought a buzz of people to Myra’s
office. Most said the noise was like nothing they had ever heard, a sonic boom
distilled only by the sound of falling shards. One person said it sounded like
the end of the world.

What happened
next was unclear. Myra was shouting at Paul and
when Warren Jones arrived, he too shouted at Paul before running to Myra.

“What the hell’s
going on?” exclaimed Warren.
A dribble of spit arced from his mouth.

“Paul,” cried Myra, her voice trembling
more in sadness than in anger. “What have you done?”

Indeed, what had
he done he wondered as he stood now at the edge of a windowless office, the
blistering wind pushing against his face and spurring him on to who knows what.
He had loved her. He had told her there was none above her in the starry sky.
He had held her in his arms and stroked her hair when she had asked without
asking. He had placed her in the heavens, where no other star or galaxy
resided. Not one. That’s what he had done. And she had said yes, and they had
said yes together from the very day they had met. As if by plan. Yet, there
beside her in the embers of his world, lit by the rush of wind and swirling
snow, he was as far away from her as forever. Myra, the one who had given herself to him.

He didn’t
remember much after that. It must have been he who had thrown the paperweight
(the one he got at the Falls gift shop with the flower petal imbedded inside
and marked down half off), but not to get back at Myra as everyone would say,
but because she had no reason to keep it. If it didn’t mean what it meant when
he gave it to her, why keep it? What was the reason? But the mind can’t keep up
with the heart in the moment. It doesn’t stand a chance. Paul didn’t stand a chance
as he stood staring at the emptiness around him. He certainly didn’t mean for
everything to come crashing down, as if anyone would believe him.

As the stillness
stretched and the snow swirled faster in the shook-up world around him, he
thought of proposing, then and there, for real, hoping somehow to undo last
night when she had sprung her surprise on him, that stupid pink plastic
bubble gum ring, her ha-ha attempt at love’s teasing as she laughed about how a
man had to be all those things a man had to be—attentive, ever flattering,
eagerly patient, and most importantly spontaneous—and he, in a fit of
mad spontaneity, joking how he
couldn’t imagine a life tied down in a repetition of days (repetition of days, he had used those very words, repetition of days) before quoting a
list of sorry statistics on marriage. What if he were to bend his knee for real, and swear to her his undying
love? Is that what she wanted—to be princess to his heroic musketeer? Would
that make right the past?

And what if he
agreed to spy for his über master,
Herr Templeton, keeping America
safe from the mujahedeen stock room thieves and time terrorist early leavers,
thereafter rising up the Green Bank rungs until his pensioned end? What if he
did everything they wanted? Was the day-to-day so bad, the heaps of certainty
piled on in a crush of sameness, the never-ending repetition of days?
What was a fall, but another beginning?

The Green Bank
volunteer floor fire warden eventually called for Paul to step away from the
edge and follow appropriate procedure for broken windows. No good ignoring
procedure he said—it was at just such times as these that procedure was needed,
as written in the Green Bank Rules of
Evacuation—but Paul stayed still. To fall. To break free. To change
everything in an instant. It was an opera of noise as they all blathered on,
their radiating peaks and troughs interfering perfectly in a symphonic mix of
indistinguishable discord.

The only calm
voice in Myra’s
office that day was Wayne Templeton. Broken glass and romantic affairs didn’t
matter to Wayne Templeton, nor did Paul’s seeming reluctance to eye spy his
co-workers, but what did matter was the who’s who order of the universe, that
pigeon-toed, follow-the-leader game of games. “Nothing personal,” Wayne Templeton
said, “but rules are rules. Anarchy is no way to run a company.” And in an
instant, Paul was fired. He was dismissed, canned, let go. He was exterminated,
released, sacked, cast out, downsized.

“Too bad,”
announced Warren Jones, “but you can’t e-mail presidents. You have to go
through channels. Who does he think he is?”

“You can’t go
around breaking windows,” the volunteer floor fire warden reminded all who
would listen. “You must respect the order. Where would we be without
procedure?”

Most, however,
said Wayne Templeton had had it in for Paul. Most said it had only been a
matter of time.

Julia Reddy
comforted Myra,
telling her that she could join her bi-weekly counseling session, where she
could tell all and name her pain, her voice notching in sympathy as she turned
through the pages to Paul’s kind, a hint of unstudied confusion skewing her
brow.

“You must be
strong,” she said. “He is obviously sick and compulsive. His id and ego are as
unmatched as his eyes.” His eyes thought Myra.

The others told her
to be strong, that time would wend its story of forgetfulness and once more
change dusk to dawn.

Building security
finally put an end to the Code White situation (declared immediately in the
event of broken windows) and after suspending their practice abseil down the
north wall of the south tower, where they had been conducting a live simulated
terrorist exercise, Paul was lead from Myra’s
office, his life apprenticeship in Green Bank, Inc kaput.

The Green Bank
gossip roared immediately about “the incident on the thirteenth floor in the
north tower” as Paul was forcefully led from the building. That is until the
next week when Wayne Templeton forgot to indicate his intention to exit the
freeway on his way home and was rolled over by a truck hauling canned tuna.
Most said Wayne Templeton didn’t deserve to be crumpled up by a truck hauling
canned tuna. Most said that life was as cruel and unknown as the weather.

Here is the
truth, thought Paul as he crumpled up in front of the television at home—the
sudsy drama of failed existence laid bare for all to see. How neat. How clean.
How modern. He changed the channel: 1, 2, 3. The Vampire Buddy Files, a repeat Celebrity Moo-lah Millions, the latest opera reality show Mi Mi Mi. How perfect the numbers
circled round. 4, 5, 6. The talking heads, the quiz, the ad for the very same
executive starter unit as his, showing the happy twosome living together,
perfect Myra
and perfect Paul. Freedom the unit
was called, the number one style going that year—everything anyone could want
in one room for $99,999. Freedom.

Of course his
thoughts turned again to her, always her, golden hair trailing behind her
rock-like pose as she slowly twisted strands of hair forever. He went through
his books, anything he thought might help: Living
and Loving in a Loving Living Way, WhyAnimals Eat Each Other, Letting Go
of Love to Get Love Back, When Good
People Get Hit By Bad Trucks. He didn’t understand a word.

“Women
and men are different. We’re from different planets. I understand that. We have
different chromosomes. We’re wired differently. But…”

He
cycled through the others, trying to make sense of his patterned past,
something, anything—Annabel in school behind the garage (she was the first,
though they hadn’t ended up being the friends she said they would), Beth, who
had made plain her country prejudices, Carol, the college freshman, who sat
behind him in Calculus (a little too calculating), and all the other do, re,
mis of his spiked amour, …, but none were like her, the noblest ancestor of his
past. Myra
Glass.

He
tried the complimentary scratch ‘n win
that had come with the Times that day, knowing full well the impregnable
odds and that two stars, two suns, two moons, two gold bars, two happy faces,
two bold JACKPOTS, and not the required THREE (praise be to God), were the
likely certainty. All were losers—‘try again’ teasing twos the lot of them.

He
wrote a poem.

But what of this and what of that my love?

What of days
that follows night unspoken?

The heart that
launched me has gone away.

Mars laughs,
that angry warrior of the sky

While
Aphrodite, naked, cries her tears.

The heart that
ever launched me has slayed me dead.

Dead, dead,
dead.

As
the sky unfolded, Paul stood gazing out from Freedom, wondering, imagining,
questioning. Anything, everything. He tried all that he could to understand,
not noticing the repossession notice under the door until morning. Paul Goodman
was being thrown out of Freedom.

“Where’s the success in
this?” he yelled. “What can be the reason?” He ran through all that he
remembered, from the size of Mount Everest to the population of Timbuktu, from the smell
of a flower to the color of a dream, from the number of atoms in the universe
to the end of infinity. Myra.
Nothing made sense.

And then in an instant, he
decided. Why should he play the game? Especially when the gamehad no
rules, or no rules he could tell—4 years of college, 3 years of 9-5, a 35-year
mortgage to pay back twice the principal on a no-bedroom apartment where he
could barely swing a kitten. Enough. Ca soufit. Genug. He
put his life in storage—the pull-out couch, the television, his collection of
suits and floral ties—and de-registered his savings, the straight-laced,
college-kid, Green Bank fund manager, only three years younger than himself,
explaining that Paul’s previously diversified strategy would go to pot by his
sudden tom foolery and that, if he kept his money right where it was, he could
more than double his after-tax, pensionable earnings before the next downturn.
Even after the overly nice senior fund Green Bank manager only three years
older than himself urged him to reconsider, telling Paul that, historically,
stocks went up and money went down, he was still sure as he trickled down the
first of his savings to a travel agent (furthering her trickle down when she
bought a deluxe, wide-screen plasma television at the mid-winter Consumer World
cash back sale). Freedom, however, would be sold at a loss.

It took some doing, but when
the calm finally returned after the madness of that day, he was on a plane. He
looked down at the briny waters below, his wide smile reflected in the starry
window, his eyes, one green, one blue, twinkling back.

“Imagine
if you were to die tomorrow,” he mouthed. “Imagine?” As he sat and thought
about what his life had become, Paul Goodman couldn’t wait for tomorrow to
begin.

Myra - Re: Love?

Dear Nell,

Sorry I haven’t
written in a while, but things around here have been rather crazy of late. Paul
broke my office window and got fired for e-mailing the Green Bank president. I
don’t know what he was trying to do, but I haven’t heard from him since, and he
isn’t answering his phone. Just when I was thinking he might be the one. I know
my cards said I wouldn’t meet Mr. Right for another year, but maybe the cards
meant I wasn’t going to marry Mr.
Right for another year. I don’t know. It got all confused between us when the
subject of marriage came up--everything went wrong. Anyway he’s gone, pop like
a balloon. I think he thinks because I initiated the relationship that it’s my
responsibility to make it right. Men?
All I said to him was “Hello?” He was so funny, pretending to be so blasé. I
could hear his voice quivering. But I’ll never forget our first day at the
Falls, and that stupid heart-shaped glass flower he got me at the dumb tourist
shop. And all the days we spent together. I hope he hasn’t given up on us. Yes,
I know, I mustn’t dwell on the past. As the poet said, no point ending up like
Miss Havisham.

I just read
that you can lose more weight watching television manually changing channels
than going to the gym--something about the in-out caloric equation. Why didn’t
they tell us that years ago so we don’t have to try all these fad diets they
trot out all the time?

Hope the snow
isn’t piled too high in Ithaca,
Sis. See you all at Easter.

OUT

Me thinks in northern light

Me sinks in aurora borealis

The wonders of the world

Where the sun and planets call home

1

FOR ALL his
organizing, Paul had gotten the wrong people to sign the wrong papers and was
detained in SchipholAirport upon arrival. He
told Dutch immigration he had European heritage, that his people were from
Europe, that America meant from Europe.
They looked right through him. He said his great grandmother was Dutch. She
made shoes. Nothing. He said his great grandfather was Irish, a fisherman. Het geeft niet. He didn’t know his great
grandfather from a pole, but it wouldn’t have mattered. They stuck him in a
room without a window.

As he waited for
the right people to come and sign the right papers, he read about the Netherlands.
“The Dutch are the best in the world at reclaiming earth from water, building
houses, roads, and whole towns on the sea. The Netherlands means ‘land under the
sea.’”

Wakayo Damassa,
an Ethiopian house painter, told him more. Wakayo had been in Schiphol a year.
They had stuck him in a room without a window when he arrived with the wrong
papers. He didn’t have any papers.

“I’m Ethiopian,
but I’m hoping to get the right papers to stay in Holland forever. Right now, I’m stuck.”

“Stuck. That’s
exactly the right word, Wakayo. Stuck.
You and I are stuck.”

“The Dutch are
the best in the world at many things,” Wakayo told Paul, his big white smile
filling his face. “Millions of people come and go through Schiphol every day.
It’s built on water. If not for the walls, the sea would swallow them whole.”
Paul and Wakayo could see the crowds ticking back and forth through the great
hall from the room where they ate and stretched. “There’s a big rush in the
morning. That’s when the trains come. And then again in the evening. More
trains. I’ve never seen any planes.” Wakayo’s smile was bigger than his head.
He didn’t know he had been in Schiphol a year.

Paul saw that
Wakayo smiled at everything. Here in Schiphol, where Wakayo had a bed and a
room and three meals a day and watched the people traffic coming and going when
they let him out to eat and stretch, he had more than he had ever had. It was
not at all like home. There he had nothing.

Paul read more:
“In the Netherlands,
everyone lives on top of each other and so the Dutch are the best at respecting
privacy and individual freedom. The Dutch are the most liberal people in the
world. At the same time, because walls break without notice and destroy houses
and roads and whole towns, the Dutch are also the most religious. The Dutch are
always right with God because they do not know at what hour God will take them
away.”

“The Dutch grow
tulips up the wazoo,” said Wakayo as he and Paul ate and stretched and looked
out at the people in the great hall. “And cheese and wooden shoes. I’ve never
seen so many people wearing wooden shoes. It’s amazing. In my village in Ethiopia,
we don’t have tulips or cheese. We don’t have shoes.”

Paul asked Wakayo
if he knew he wasn’t actually in Holland,
that Schiphol was an airport and that he had been detained until they could
verify that he wasn’t illegal or wanted by the authorities for some unknown
crime.

“I know. I’m
stuck. They’re working on my papers. Did you know the Dutch were the first to
think man was in charge, that the world belongs to man? The Dutch are the most
enlightened people in the world. They have accomplished great and many things.”
Wakayo’s smile spilled off his cheeks. “My village doesn’t even have water.”

Paul smiled. His
brochure had said the same thing.

That day the
right man with the right papers came, and Paul was put on a train for Amsterdam. He had to leave
Wakayo behind. He wasn’t even permitted to say goodbye. As he departed Schiphol
airport, Paul wondered how long Wakayo Damassa would be stuck in his room
without a window. What would he think when he got unstuck? When they finally
let him go? What would it be like to be free? Wakayo had no idea.

2

PAUL STUMBLED
directions to Hotel Erasmus in Rembrandtplein and after checking in, went for a
walk along the ripple-tiered canals of Amsterdam, in and out of the stuttering
crowds, excited to be free and among people again. The late night hung in the
air. The canal circles brought him past the girly-girls posing in the windows,
their glows scented red fluorescent, and the baby-boys tittering and smoking as
they eyed outside. They smoked rocket-ride hydroponic cannabis that did to the
cerebral cortex what pheromones did to the pituitary glands. Paul’s eyes were a
mile wide. He had never seen girly-girls blowing kisses at baby-boys from
behind sex-painted windows. He had never smelt rocket-ride hydroponic cannabis
before.

As he walked back
to the hotel, he spotted a familiar face—Jan de Witt, the Dutch client he had
met at Green Bank. They made their introductions, commenting on their chance
meeting, and bounced news at each other.

“I was sorry to
hear you got fired,” said Jan. “That was madness.”

Paul stared down
the canal, wafts of red neon streaking across the store fronts. They were in
the Old Centre, the gabled buildings held up at odd angles by each other.

“Indeed. All
because of an e-mail.” Paul replayed the events. He didn’t mention Myra. He was showing
strength.

Jan suggested a
drink at the Wild Bull and they settled into the dull dark of a Red Light
district bar, the beer brought by Jan’s nod. A band of boys in familiar
baseball caps and over-sized clothes were crushed at the front, their weekend
spilling overtime.

“Amazing how
things change. It’s barely two months since I was in Buffalo,” said Jan. The drinks party,
remembered Paul. Myra.
The day they had met.

Jan told Paul
about Wayne Templeton. “Turns out he’d been financing his own deals with client
money for years. He had a mistress and a house in Vegas. The fat bastard even
had a place in Monte Carlo.”
Paul sat blank-faced as the shock sunk in. “Still, he knew the ins and outs of
sheltered investment. Can’t have been all
bad.”

Paul thought of Myra again, wanting to ask
Jan if he had heard anything, but instead said nothing. Not talking about her
showed he didn’t care, that he had moved on. He hadn’t. He had thought of
little else. At Schipol, he had called out her name in the middle of the night.
His eyes glistened in a rush before he shook himself and looked up at Jan. “I
can’t believe we ran into each other,” he said.

“Who knows how to
explain chance? Imagine if I hadn’t decided to walk through the Old Centre
tonight? We wouldn’t be having this conversation. Imagine if you’d been in thatcar with Wayne Templeton?” Jan laughed
as the question trickled out. “You’d be canned tuna.”

As they talked on
(mayonnaise on fries, pickled herring and onions, white beer), at that very
moment Myra was sitting in a café in Paris on Rue Descartes
near the Panthéon. She was drinking red wine and looking down at the twin
towers of Notre Dame Cathedral. She had put aside her travel book, thinking how
lucky she was to be there after dreaming of going for so long and deciding,
finally, after the debacle of that day at Green Bank, to go. A man sitting at a
table across from her smelled the wine and sniffed the evening air and was
about to ask her the exact same thing Jan was about to ask Paul, “Why don’t you
come and work for me?” Afterwards, the man walked her to her hotel and gave her
his card, casually pointing out the Panthéon as they passed by, saying, in his
low guide voice that, in the Panthéon, the earth had been shown to move. He
didn’t know the details, but he knew, as everyone did, that night and day were
caused by the turning earth. He knew even though it seemed so obviously
otherwise.

Jan raised his
glass to Paul. “You know, you could come and work for me? I could use your help
with the accounts.”

“Actually, I was
planning on doing some travelling,” answered Paul, casually questioning his
resolve as he held his glass aloft.

“It’s an e-biz,”
continued Jan. “There’s stock. Could be truckloads of money.” Jan nodded for
another round of beer, eyeing the waitress up and down as she retreated from
their table. The baseball boys were swelling at the bar as the entertainment
now strutted on stage, Miss D’s sultry song and dance encouraged to excess by
the boy’s whistles.

Paul continued
with the same resolve, saying he had come to Europe to travel and learn and see
a little of the past in the pages of a real Europe.

“There’s venture
capital and government seed money and a Nasdaq float,” urged Jan. “Did I say
stock? I have the phone business already—chat lines, psychics, quiz games, the
usual—all charged by the minute.”

“You do the quiz
games?”

“Sure. Start them
off easy—Who discovered America?
Julius Caesar, Isaac Newton, Christopher Columbus, Paul Newman—and work them up
to the population of Timbuktu.
It’s a license to print money, the user’s credit card account wired straight into
the bank.” Jan explained the ins and out of the lodged credits and debits—all
subcontracted—the deposits and withdrawals, plusses and minuses that added up
to money in the bank, as long as lonely men needed propping up, as long as the
forlorn desired to know the future, as long as trivia offered hope to the quick
witted. “As long as the consumer needs to consume,” smiled Jan as he raised his
glass. “As long as everyone pursues their own interest. It’s a winner.”

And so Paul
became a director of the numbered company 149162536, a division of Rode Hoed BV, a
handshake and two shots of sweet borreltje
Dutch gin sealing the deal. Paul laughed, “All because I was in the Old Centre
of Amsterdam at the same time that Jan de Witt was walking home. Who knows the
future? Who knows chance?” He had forgotten that being detained in Schipol with
Wakayo Damassa had delayed the sweet order that chance was making of his life.
“Who knows fortune and luck?”

The offer of
half-off drinks had not filled the Wild Bull on a Tuesday night, but there was
now a dozen baseball boys, their shouts growing louder as Paul looked up from
the table, noticing the counter-sunk stage and Miss D, freed of all but her
matador’s cape. Indeed, Buffalo was not nearly
as liberal or religious as Amsterdam.
Paul and Jan watched as an argument broke out after a photo flash went off in
the middle of Miss D’s noted bullfighter routine, during her now-you-see-it,
now-you-don’t ‘tora tora’ bit, and the bouncers moved in to retrieve the
camera.

“The Dutch are
very particular about how things are done,” said Jan, as the fracas turned into
a round of heated name calling with demands for refunds if the camera wasn’t
returned.

Management was
called and after determined negotiations a deal was settled by an exchange of a
Dodgers cap and two Stars and Stripes key chains for the
camera, the baseball boys congratulating themselves with backslaps and high
fives about their deal and the supremacy of Rule Americana.

“It happens all
the time with the young boys,” smiled Jan. “First time away from home. They
think they can take photos for nothing.” Jan explained how Miss D had her own
photographs to sell.

After one more
round, Jan and Paul left the Wild Bull, Jan walking Paul to the Rode Hoed
offices, his pace deliberate as he stepped lightly over the cobbled streets.
Jan was tall and slender and he easily slipped aside to let others pass in the
occasional confrontation of bodies. His hands were forever stroking his
sprouting chin.

“The city in the trees, that’s what
Erasmus called Amsterdam,”
Jan told Paul as they walked. “Crews of men knocking wooden piles into water
with nothing more than ropes and pulleys and the sweat of their brow. ‘Hup the hoe high’ they sang as they
worked, happy in their simple labor and the hope of a drink when the day was
done.” Jan stopped in front of a modern red brick building, astride the more
ancient and crooked. “Rode Hoed or Red Hat,” he announced. “For now, the eighth
floor. Tomorrow? Who knows? It’s a winner.”

They arranged to
meet in the morning and Paul retraced his steps to the hotel, remembering his
route through the cobbled and lit-up bridges and landmarks Jan had pointed out.
He surprised himself by not getting lost. The narrow canal streets seemed
indistinguishable, but Jan’s markings guided him. He saw the Anne Frank House.
Paul had never heard of Anne Frank. Rembrandt and Van Gogh—he had heard of
them, but didn’t know their paintings—something about fat girls and starry
nights. As he neared the hotel, the red lights buzzed again. He saw the
baby-boys and the girly-girls. He smelled the burning weed. The night lingered.
The sun slipped forever west.

Perhaps his life
was falling into order after the madness of that day? Living in Europe? A job with stock in a publicly-traded company? Buffalo seemed light-years
away.

Paul smiled as he
lay his head down that night, the whistle of the trees enmeshed in the still
simmering street sounds below. “It’s all the way you look at life,” he thought.
“What is choice, but one of an infinity of possibilities—the one taken as real?
Isn’t life what we make of choice? What we do when the road diverges, when life
bends?” He wasn’t thinking about tragedy, about losing one’s job, or being
scrunched up in a car. He wasn’t thinking of Myra.

3

A CRAZE of bright
red tulips traced the window sills of the Red Hat board room. Familiar Dutch
prints hung from the walls: Rembrandt’s The
Night Watch, the dark light focussed sharply, Vermeer’s The Letter, striking colors in simple
camera-obscured style, Van Gogh’s White
House at Night, the bright star behind, illuminating stillness, and the
Mondrian, the one that everyone liked to hate, Broadway Boogie-Woogie, with its grid of reds and yellows and
blues. Paul hadn’t been interested in art before, but seeing them each day in a
city of strangers, somehow he felt connected, as if familiarity was knowing.

“Good. Everything
is on schedule,” said Jan, pointing around the room as he assessed the to-do
tasks. “Paul’s checking the counters, Hugo the servers. Hugo? Fully tested?” The
Red Hat launch was a week away.

Hugo, the head
technician, glossed quickly over the details about backbones and bandwidth and
load times. Beside him, Rob filled in the details. Laurens was next, talking
wattage and power and matching impedance. He was the engineer. They wore
polyester plaid shirts and striped pants and wore their beards in goatee style
similar to Jan’s. They all loved working.

Paul thought of
them as bugs, always busy, always flittering about. Hugo worked non-stop to and
fro between the Red Hat room and the operating room like a bee. Rob was the
ant, performing tasks one at a time, lugging computers and cameras on Hugo’s
command, his clawing tools constantly at work to separate and join, and Laurens
was the spider, arranging the lattice of cameras and trails of wires. The more
Paul saw, the more he thought of them as bugs, each evolved according to a
task. The perfect functioning human—designed specifically for work.

Paul’s job was
the accounting statistics, counting up the users on each camera and billing
them accordingly. There were thirty-six cameras in the Red Hat room and any of
the thirty-six angles could be dialed up to get the feeling of interaction. At
the forefront of interactive internet and television technology, the Red Hat room
was like being there. The format was well known, but had never been tried in an
adult environment and was generating immense interest. In four six-hour stints
per day for one year, thirty-six actors at a time would be followed by a camera
doing whatever struck their fancy so as not to be one of the three weeded out
each week by the public taste. There had been no trouble getting
actors—everyone wanted the prize. As for Red Hat, at one euro a minute per
user, they’d be swimming in it. When Red Hat went public, there wouldn’t be
wheelbarrows enough to cart away the money.

“The user can get
up to eight angles at once,” said Paul, continuing with an explanation of the
accounting methods, before Jan took over—Red Hat was definitely Jan’s show.

“Obviously the statistics
will show us who is popular and who is not,” Jan began, “and so we’ve decided
to roll out continuous numbers on each actor to give the user the feel of a
game. We know competition fuels this kind of show. Besides, we have to count
them anyway—we wouldn’t want to over
bill anyone.” The tech boys, Hugo, Rob, and Laurens, laughed on cue, their
in-out guffaws filling and emptying their torsos in a flutter.

A discussion on
cabling logistics followed, Hugo explaining in English, before turning to
Dutch. The office language was English with Paul there, Dutch otherwise or if
the details were too pointed.

As the boys
batted around the tech talk, Paul became drawn into the Mondrian. Why didn’t
they like it he wondered? The colorful symmetry had a quieting effect he
thought. It looked easy. Colored reds, yellows, and blues in black squares.
Grids, right angles, like counting in color, like ordered numbers. It reminded
him of the Partridge Family bus. Maybe that was it. Didn’t seem much like art
thought Paul. Was it too simple next to the detail of Rembrandt—the chicken
girl amid the shooting party in illuminated somber light? He eyeballed the Vermeer
andthe girl writing in earnest,
feeling he was intruding on a private moment. He hadn’t noticed the scrunched
up letter on the floor before. What was she writing? To whom? How important it
seemed to get it right.

Saskia, the
office manager, called in with messages. “Black or white tie for the launch?”
she asked. “The mayor’s office wants to know.” She waited in the doorway, Paul
wondering if she and Jan had something going by the way their bodies slumped
sympathetically when near. She shifted her weight in anticipation of Jan’s
response, before departing in the same breezy way she had entered.

Next, Jan and
Paul discussed the billing details. They were by the Rembrandt, Jan watching Paul’s eyes move back and forth as they
talked. “It’s a day painting,” said
Jan finally, his tone deepening as he interrupted himself. “It should be called
The Day Watch.”

“Sorry?”

“It was a
portrait of the civil guard on day watch. But it hung above a fireplace for
over two hundred years. When the Rijksmuseum acquired it they thought it was a
night scene because the soot had obscured the light. When it became famous,
they called it The Night Watch.” Paul
pushed out a smile. “They only figured it out recently. Quite
extraordinary—turning day into night.”

“Why don’t they
change the name?” asked Paul.

“It’s not that
easy. Everyone knows it as The Night
Watch,” smiled Jan. “They say the guard standing in the back is Rembrandt
himself.”

“Really?”

“Yeah, a
Renaissance Hitchcock, nodding and winking for posterity.” Jan twiddled a coin
as he spoke, slipping it under and over his fingers and in and out of his palm.

“Interesting.”

Jan returned the
conversation to the launch. “It’s looking good Paul. Start getting the buckets
ready. Remember, a good idea is one thing, but the application of a good idea, now that is the making of a good
business.” And then, after telling Paul to keep up the good work, Jan
was gone.

The day before
the launch, the cameras rolled in-house for a final test, and the office buzzed
with excitement, the trade word spreading that Red Hat was a possible next best
thing. There had been a news crew in that morning and three profiles already in
the business pages, a whole page in De
Tijd on Red Hat’s projected rise.

As Paul checked
the counters in the operating room with Hugo, Jan directed movements in the Red
Hat room, fastidiously ordering new camera placements and rearranging furniture.

“Okay, Hugo, next
counter,” instructed Paul, squatting under a row of consoles as he called out
the numbers.

“There’s
definitely something about virtual images that makes people behave
differently,” said Hugo as he dialed up the next counter and yelled back the
numbers. “I don’t know. Maybe the distance and the closeness at the same time
obscures the meaning.” Hugo buzzed to the next console, turning the dial as
Paul prescribed. “Whoa. Check out Miss Papua New Guinea.”

“What?” Paul’s back was corkscrewed most
indiscreetly on the floor as he looked up.

“B2. From Indonesia. You know, the usual
trying to get her papers.”

B2, as she was known by her camera, or Mary as she would soon be known in the
Red Hat room, was the clear office favorite. Her metabolism overheated and her
smile rippled out from her peach-tanned face as her skin shone happiness.

“Imagine when she
meets Olympus Mons,” continued Hugo as he dialed in her counter. As Hugo
explained to Paul, Olympus Mons was the established late-night Dutch television
star hired to generate the early buzz—camera E5 or Thaddeus on the
show. He had made his name as the first person in line to buy a Playbox II game
console after a three-day wait, parlaying that fame into a cancer charity
phone-in show call answerer, and then to a late-night adult talk show host.
Hugo zoomed in Olympus Mons’s camera and then Mary’s camera as she lay on the
couch in the Red Hat room, pushed prone into the seat cushions, her wide smile
divined by the actors beside her. “It’s unbelievable how the camera plays her.
Forget the others. They haven’t got a chance.”

Paul looked up
and eyed Mary in close-up on her console, her virtual pheromones pouring out in
buckets.

“What console did
you say?” asked Paul as he faked a smile. “B2?”

B2. Mary.
Whatever she wanted to call herself. It didn’t matter. As long as the buzz
about Red Hat was correct, there would be more money than stars.

At dinner that
night, Jan and Paul went over the last minute details of the launch. They were
in the restaurant side of the Wild Bull, having left the others to their
pre-launch celebrations. Jan uncorked the champagne and filled two glasses,
offering his glass in an extended prost.
Paul asked again about the legality of what they were doing.

“I know you
Americans are squeamish about skin, but the Dutch have been doing this for
centuries. You’re in the land
of Erasmus and
liberalism.” Jan stroked his beard between his fingers as he talked. “Hell,
Rembrandt drew scores of nudes—in the bath, on the toilet, couples in the act.
And now they hang him in all the great museums of the world. Are we doing
anything differently with the technology of our time?”

“Yeah, I
suppose,” said Paul, scoring his apprehension as tiredness from a month of long
days and short nights.

“Hey, there are
bad things in the world Paul, don’t get me wrong. Anne Frank hiding in a room
for two years and getting carted off to Belsen,
that’s horror. Paying six million for a bunch of colored squares, that’s an
atrocity. But watching people in a room doing what people do in a room? Please.
You should ask yourself why some people have nothing better to do than watch
others do what they should be doing themselves. Who are we not to get their
credit card numbers to help them along the way?” Jan’s laughter trickled out as
their glasses clinked. “The whole world watching at one euro a minute.”

“You’re right.”
replied Paul. “One euro a minute.”

“It’s not like
we’re forcing anyone to participate,” continued Jan as he refilled the
champagne. “Imagine that world. Or if someone was watching and you didn’t know? At least, Red Hat is a
choice.” They knocked back another drink as Jan refilled the glasses and
offered up another toast.

Red Hat was the
beginning, he told Paul, the beginning of an adventure, unimaginable to most.
The world was full of people afraid to dream, their jobs defining not only
their work hours, but their whole existence, without which they would cease to
be. Wouldn’t he rather live trying to succeed, than die a failure with all the
others? Wouldn’t he? “Red Hat is a dream, Paul. What is life without a dream?”
Paul nodded in agreement. “To success. To one’s own vision of the future.”

As they continued
to discuss the details for the launch, Jan placed a package on the table and
instructed Paul to open it, saying it was a keepsake for his hard work,
something to remember after the hoopla died down.

“It was called a
looker,” he explained as Paul lifted the copper-covered telescope to his eye,
his face lost in wonder. “Everyone knows Galileo stole the idea for the
telescope from the Dutch. Actually, it was two Dutch children playing. They
stuck two lenses together and saw the world magnified for the first time.
Imagine, one of the greatest inventions ever, an accident. Pure chance.” Jan
raised his glass. “But success is no accident Paul. Believe me, hard work,
dedication, and focus are the pillars of great achievement. You must never be
afraid to succeed.”

Soon after, the
conversation turned to women, Jan again doing most of the talking. He was a
very good talker. “If you put a woman above you, she looks down at you,” he
said. “If you treat her badly she wants you. What’s a man to do?” Jan nodded to
a woman across the room with a man beside, fixed to her words, seeming by his
look to indicate to Paul his derision. “Endless insecurity in an endless game
of Snakes and Ladders.” Jan told Paul that he and his girlfriend didn’t go for
games, that they didn’t impose expectations on each other. “We’re not into the
politics of relationships. Who do you want to lie with? That’s all you need to
know.”

“I never thought
about it like that,” said Paul, his thoughts tripping through his past.
Expectations? Snakes and Ladders?

“Forget this
Romeo and Juliet nonsense. Forever?
Forever is far too long a time. Hendrickje and I don’t compare needs. We don’t
make equal the unequal.”

“You know, I
thought you and Saskia had something going?” asked Paul.

“Saskia?”laughed Jan. “Life with Saskia is all Snakes and Ladders. She wants to change men. I don’t need to be
changed. Besides, she’s too thin and precious.” Jan proceeded to explain, as if
amour was a painting, the gobs of flesh color layered on in the inventive mind
of the artist under the influence of a roly-poly tryst beyond the canvas. To
have what one sees painted in one’s mind.

With desert came
Jan’s beginnings. He didn’t tell much, his story as guarded as his love
affairs. He had grown up in Delft,
the porcelain city of kings, and gone into business to please his father. He
had studied art for a term in Amsterdam,
before the parental decree had been read aloud. He let on that he preferred to
forget more than remember, changing the subject with an order of more
champagne. He had been married once before to a writer. A long time ago.
Passion subjugated in work, thought Paul—was that Jan’s story? The mysterious
man, who talked but did not tell of love.

As they talked
on, Paul’s thinking became more disjointed, the drink popping out unwanted
thoughts, and he finally asked Jan what he had wanted to ask since the night
they had first met in the Old Centre. He asked about Myra.

“That’s right. I
remember the two of you were together.” Jan twilled his champagne. “I don’t
think she got fired. She was in Human Resources, wasn’t she? Nothing to do with
Wayne.”

“Yeah. I
suppose,” said Paul.

“I heard she was
getting married.”

“Married?”

“Some guy in
Acquisitions and Mergers. I don’t know. Maybe I heard wrong. I got it from
Frank Jones I think. Or was it Warren Jones?”

No time is long
enough to explain a reaction, though uncoiled in an instant, Paul managed to
stage an answer—the negative posed as real. “Hey. We broke up,” he said. “I’m
happy for her. I wish her well.” He smiled and changed the subject,
off-handedly, trying not to show interest in what he had pointedly declared
didn’t bother him. If he had had more time, perhaps projecting a less guarded
and controlled manner, he might have said, “Oh, is that so?” or “Well, isn’t
that interesting?” or “Married, you say?” but the best he could offer on the
spur, under the lens, as Jan eyed his tell-tale facial fissures, was a safe,
blanketed denial. It made him sick he wanted to say. Acquisitions and Mergers?
More like Clearings and Appropriations. Oh, the god-damned irony.

Soon after, Jan
and Paul departed to the cool night air, Paul shaking out the stiffness from
his legs. Married? At least he knew.
Wasn’t that better than not knowing, though he couldn’t think how being doused
in a deluge of enlightenment was better than blissfully not knowing, buried to
one’s head in the sandy beach of ignorance. He didn’t want to think. He wanted
to be sick.

They walked on
along the canal into the Old Centre. “You okay?” asked Jan, Paul’s pace falling
out of step with his own.

“Yeah. Fine.” His
lie as it lay in the air seemed less bold.

Paul slowed for
his turn.

“Where are you
going?” asked Jan. “You’re the next bridge.”

Paul returned his
pace to Jan’s, feigning disorientation. Even in his worn and intoxicated state,
Paul’s understood by Jan’s question that he had been meandering his way to work
each day along the same route they had walked that first night, in and out of
tourist spots and over and back across the canal, for fear of getting lost down
some untried route, and only now realizing that he had been walking miles out
of his way each day. Next bridge? He
turned his stupidity to laughter. “Yeah, I know. I like to get some air.” Air. That was a good one.

After Jan left,
Paul lingered by the canal, eying two stars in the twilight overhead, familiar
enough now to locate them at a glance, always there, like two eyes peeping into
the lives of man. Success. Failure. Must he be served both together? What was
success without her?

That night, he
poured out the contents of his stomach. Married?
How could she be getting married? It couldn’t be. And to find out on the eve of
the Red Hat launch? How cruel was that? No, she couldn’t have fallen for
another so soon. What did a past mean if it could be undone in a blink? The
snot streamed out from his nose. Maybe it was the champagne? Champagne had never agreed with him.

4

FOR THE LAUNCH,
the thirty-six Red Hat screens were front and center in a six by six grid atop
the marble and brass of the Citizen’s Hall of the Royal Palace, the place
packed with the clothed haute and neder style and techie set, the two needing
no telling apart. Jan and Paul were mingling among the crowd, Jan throwing his
hand and deep smile around, Paul following after in his wake. Saskia and Hugo
were at the door handing out plastic loot bags—a red miniature wooden shoe key
chain, a porcelain Delft pin of soft cameo flowery vine and grapes, and a Red
Hat fridge magnet with logo and web address—while the tech boys, Rob and
Laurens, ran the consoles outside from the mobile truck in Dam Square. They
were all dressed in starlit red ties with white dinner jacket regalia. The room
was decorated up the wazoo in tulips.

In a circle with
Jan and the mayor and his wife and the mayor’s aides and their wives, Paul
listened patiently, his thoughts racing with anticipation. “You know, you’re
onto something here,” said the mayor to no one in particular. “This electronic
viewing is quite popular. You can hardly turn the channel nowadays without some
such show or other.”

“And I’m glad to
see that it isn’t just the English. They really are the last sort to be showing
the Dutch these things. All so prim and proper. So hung up on their roles.” A
ripple of laughter passed around their circle. “The Dutch know about these
things—ripe and red, that’s what I
say. I can’t think the last time my wife and I were this excited.” His wife
nodded his acknowledgment of her presence, her legs bending in the minutest of
thrusts.

“Thank you
indeed, Mister Mayor,” returned Jan.

“You know,” added
Paul, seeming rather statesmen like, “Nothing like this has ever been tried in
the States.”

“Yes, well, I’m
afraid, Mr. Goodman, the Americans are not the best at everything. The Dutch,
small though we are, have always reminded the world of its truer conscience.
Always practical in our morality.”

“Indeed, Mister
Mayor, I have learned much about the Dutch. Earth from water. Night from day.
The world from nothing.” As they spoke, the mayor kept himself in profile, ever
eyeing the possibility of a photograph.

“As the first
great world power, the Dutch know a little of what works and what doesn’t. We
know about engineering and law making and the needs and wants of our citizens.”
He spoke as though all were listening. “It is important to promote our rich
liberal heritage, our common human nature. As old as man.” The ripples
resounded back and forth around the circle. “Hup the hoe high,” he yelled. As old as woman, whispered his wife
to no one in particular.

Paul thought of
Rembrandt’s company in light preparing for the action as they paused for a
photo, before the mayor clapped Jan on the back and brought him to the circle
of journalists now assembled together by the champagne table.

“I forgot how
much the Dutch love to talk about themselves,” whispered the mayor’s wife to
Paul, before he was left standing alone after she too dissolved into the crowd.

Soon after, Paul
found his way to the door with Saskia and Hugo. He complimented Saskia on her
smart evening wear and Hugo on his pressed new jacket. He had never seen Hugo
in anything but polyester plaid. They both eagerly eyed the Red Hat screens as
the countdown clock counted down.

“Everyone talks
as if Holland
is in the sixteenth century,” remarked Paul. “They all say what a great day it
is for the Dutch. The mayor even compared Red Hat to a Flemish painting.”

“It is
impressive,” said Saskia, her hands sliding up and down the sides of her satin
skirt. “A great accomplishment for man.”

“The world is
about to change,” said Hugo, stuffing his mouth with a large cheese cube and a
cut-out wedge of apple. “You might as well turn back the sea than stop
tonight.” He shook apart a sliver of chicken and another cube of cheese and
filled his mouth again as the countdown clock turned through the final seconds.

On the stage
below the screens, the mayor introduced Jan and said that Red Hat was the
electronic equivalent of the Red Light district and hoped that it would bring
more tourists to Amsterdam.
“It’s a great day for the Dutch. The lowlands go high tech,” he yelled to a
chorus of applause.

A flurry of pumped-up
music by the Britpop band Flood brought a wave of anxious cheers from the
crowd, the band crashing their crescendo with a shrill Star-Spangled Banner electric guitar riff as the screens flashed
the Red Hat room, now slowly appearing in light. Wild shouts greeted the
actors.

“There she is,
top and left,” smiled Hugo, scraping clean with his finger a mixture of cheese
and cracker from his mouth. “B2.”
Mary.

Paul watched the
screens with all the others as the action started out tame and taut, the
actors, all strangers until yesterday, making their way in and out of casual
introductions. Even though most had worked in the industry in some fashion or
another, no one knew exactly how the ice would break. Jan had said that the
competition—the weeding out of the unpopulars
as he called them—would determine the action and that soon the clothes would
come off, but how and between whom or among whom was still to be
determined. The push-button, popularity bible on Red Hat had not yet been
written.

“Who can account for
public taste?” said Jan. “The unknown is part of the mystery.”

Mary had the
stuff, that was obvious, but so did the more demure Lucy and the white-haired
Thaddeus, the rugged Olympus Mons of Dutch television fame. Lucy, or Val
Marineras, known to all from her four-year stint as the government sex trade
minister and a local advice to the lovelorn columnist, was also a favorite. In
opposite parts of the Red Hat room, they had yet to meet.

Hugo eyed the
slow moving action, his mouth agog. “This is unreal.”

Saskia whispered
to Paul with a giggle, “I asked him once if he knew that food didn’t come from
a refrigerator. He grunted. Techies.”
She put her hand to her mouth to hide her whisper. “Don’t let him start with
the magazines. He’s into them all—Conspiracy
Theory Monthly, Aliens Unlimited,
Army Secrets. Supposedly, we come
from space spores.” Her flash of disdain seemed oddly insincere thought Paul.

“You know, I
thought you and Jan were together,” whispered Paul, the action still unmoved on
the screens.

“Jan? Good God no. He’s too controlling.
We did have a fling, but that was ages ago. I don’t know, he likes his women,
well, how do I say, fuller. His
girlfriend is here somewhere, probably sitting alone in a corner. She’s a
nurse—psychiatry—one can only wonder.”

“Men,” muttered
Saskia, her attention returning again to the screens as Lucy moved toward
Thaddeus in the bottom right. “Olympus Mons,” her mutter continued, “now
there’s a real man. Tall and rugged. Attentive.” She snapped open her purse and
touched up her face with a quick dab of shadow and blush, undaunted by Paul’s
intrusion into her world.

As the drama
ripened in the roomful of strangers, the buzz droned louder in the Citizen’s
Hall, the conversation excitedly heavy again as their skin shimmered pale
sweat. Red Hat was working, the prurient interest and suspense of when so and
so would meet so and so and get it off a natural mix.

For the launch,
the guests at the RoyalPalace were invited to
work the screens and a line had formed on stage. Any camera could be blown up
and zoomed in or out to get the best view or shown in split screen with another
angle. At the console, the mayor’s wife had dialed in the dark-haired, boyish
Simon—C3—with the shrunken shirt talking to Mary, their angles split as they
lounged on the main couch, drinking and chatting. Blasting out over the
speakers, their intimate talk quieted the Citizen’s Hall, the occasional
knowing cheer drowning the obvious lines.

They made their
introductions, trotting through their backgrounds, before Simon chanced a kiss,
Mary casually turning her cheek away, knowing, it would seem, that by
pretending not to want, not to be watched, that she was more wanted, more
watched. Paul, for the most part, had not been watching closely, though he
looked up now at Mary and Simon. As Jan had told him, it wasn’t the physical,
the roaming limbs or peacock struts, the aggressive rasp of suggestive words,
but the underneath, the hidden, the mystery, the not-yet-determined finale that drew one in. It was as if
the climax, the end, the raison d’être,
was not what was desired, but the build-up itself. The being in the moment. The
game.

“The night is
long,” cooed Mary to wild applause as she turned Simon away, a shushing wave
immediately quieting the citizen’s claps. “We’ve only just met. I want to get
to know you better.” Her fingers gently clawed his chest, a round of laughter
and hisses filling the hall before being stilled yet again by another,
prolonged shushing wave. Paul laughed, thinking only for a moment of the
meaningless of her remark. To meet. To know. To forever chance the future.

Despite her small
size, her seeming insouciance holding back the arms of Simon, Mary was in
perfect control. She was a goddess, a shrine, a fully blown-up blow-up doll.
She had only to play her part.

At the consoles,
the mayor’s wife dialed out Mary and Simon, the screens showing all thirty-six
actors again. Calls for action hurried her indecision as Lucy and Thaddeus made
their acquaintance in another corner, kissing and dancing slowly in rhythm to a
muted boy band song.

The mayor then
took his turn at the console, eager to exploit the photo op for the morning
papers, his wife having to be pulled away by two anxious aides, and he dialed
in a close-up of Lucy and Thaddeus in split screen. A cheer greeted his dexterity
at the controls and then another at the sight of Olympus Mons kissing the
ever-popular Val Marineras as the light and shadow fell across their bodies.
But their movements remained tame and hidden, and the citizens urged for
another view. All were shouting Mary’s name.

After more
twiddling, another couple’s slow amore
began and then fizzled out and the mayor’s wife stole back the controls,
dialing up Simon and Mary, now kissing on the couch. The citizens yelled their
encouragement as Simon’s hands rolled up and down Mary’s back, Mary encouraging
his flickered forays underneath. Soon, the hall turned quiet as a church.

“The trickle has
begun,” said Jan leaning into Paul, his tall, slender body bending to meet
Paul’s ear. “I just talked to Laurens in the truck. Eighty-eight million people
are watching on line.”

It is all a
matter of size. If the big screen is big enough, a boy and a girl can be eight
stories tall, their blood pumping through thirty-six meters of veins, vessels,
and arteries, in and out of the aorta, through ventricles across the coronary
valve, 100,000 times a day, blown up as big as trees—boys divining girls in the
pumped-up heat of adrenaline. It wasn’t until the seventeenth century that man
knew the purpose of the beating heart was to circulate blood. Man as machine,
the parts working in context with the whole. How the heart became entwined in
love is another story.

C3 took B2
from behind, shown in split screen by the mayor’s wife. All could see Mary’s
head and upper back cupped by Simon’s body as he moved in and out in beats,
their faces blown up full on camera. The sounds echoed in unison as the
Citizen’s Hall erupted in screams of ‘Mary.’ The whole of high and low Dutch
culture watched, their hearts beating in rhythm, as C3 and B2 moved in and out,
the rapture running throughout the Citizen’s Hall.

The citizens
cried out for more and, as the camera angles were exploited more adroitly, the
“good scenes” as they were being called got better. No one wanted the night to
end. Saskia was so taken by the moment she ended up in a hotel with Hugo, his
first amore in years. You could no
more turn back the sea. Red Hat was a winner. The next day, De Tijd would make Mary and Simon equal
frontrunners at 8-1 to win top prize.

When Paul walked
home that night in the early hours of the morning, the streets were drunk with
desire. Never had so many watched together what was sanctioned as culture, and
the new virtual group experience was seen as freeing. Strangers approached each
other asking had they seen it and did they want to see it together as if
a shared festive living had broken through the porous walls between them. Red
Hat was a success beyond all expectations. More money than stars thought Paul.

He eyed his two
stars, temporarily tied together in the sky, unaware that he was gazing at
Jupiter and Saturn. The money. Could he count that high?

The next day as
he walked to work through the OldCenter, he saw her in the
window. She was sitting alone. He craned to see her, her head buried in her
hands. He knew it was her, the watery skin, her fire eyes, her hair caught like
wind. She had been crying. Paul walked on, stepping past with little thought as
to why she was there, alone. After a few uncertain strides, he returned his
steps.

As he took the
seat next to her, he realized he didn’t even know her name. “Are you okay?” he
tried. “Mary?B2?”

“Felicity. My name is Felicity.” She
spoke clearly, the consonants clipped by her accent. Indonesian, thought Paul?
She was Surinamese.

“Sorry. Are you
okay, Felicity?” Felicity was in
obvious dismay, her head bobbing about. He saw the weariness of her face, lined
in sad drudgery. He asked again if she was okay.

“My sister was
wrong.”

“Your sister? I’m
sorry? Wrong?”

“It makes no
matter.”

Felicity had been
working in Amsterdam
for two years in the underground economy, with nothing to back up her
residency. Her thoughts raced between her papers and her sister. Paul passed
her a napkin. It seemed the thing to do.

“I started here
at the Wild Bull and did some cubicles before I met the nice man. He gave me
work on the phone lines to help with money. I worked day and night. He promised
me my papers.”

“Papers? I’m sure
you don’t have to worry about your papers,” said Paul. She was younger than he
thought and prettier than on screen, her bright, cherry red lips unable in
person to mask her youth. Paul wondered how old. Sixteen?

“I just wanted to
meet a man, and get married, and have children. That is why I came to Holland. I thought he
would take care of me.” She went on about her sister being wrong, her head
flailing back as she banged the ground with her foot and crossed herself.

“Who?Who
would take care of you? Jan?” asked
Paul.

“My sister said
it was okay, because he watches over all of us. She said it was okay no matter what,
and that he would forgive me as long as I got my papers. He is Lord of all the
sheep.” Felicity’s lips were quivering. “But I know it is wrong. I should not
have done it. I should not have listened. My papers. And now a show.”

“But you chose to
be on the show?” tried Paul. “Do you not want
to be on the show?” Paul was having trouble understanding what she was saying.

Felicity banged
on the table and screamed through her teeth. “Show? What difference is show to me? I make nothing and now
I must work another year to get my papers.” She screamed again. “And for
what? In a year, they’ll find something else to say it isn’t so.”

Paul passed her
another napkin. She was on drugs he thought, her talk disconnected from one
moment to the next. We all make choices in life. She had made hers, he had made
his. Paul told her that if she won she wouldn’t have to work, that that was the
system, the weeding of fame and fortune. “Don’t you understand the show?” he
said. “One hundred thousand euros if you win?” Paul told her there was every
possibility. A star.

Felicity screamed
again through her teeth. “You and your pitiful stories. A star? Is that what
you think?”

Was it up to him
to understand someone else’s life? Their choices? Paul had enough to worry
about in his own life, the causality of chance and choice that had led him away
from home. From her. Chance and choice? The spread of uncertainty made certain.

He left Felicity
on her own, unable to understand her disregard for the reality of her life.

White light is a
closed rainbow, spraying cosmic colors, first Potassium red, the bottom, the
lowest, vibrating pleasure. Any less is heat.

5

ALTHOUGH THERE
WAS concern in other countries about the morality of what Red Hat was doing,
Jan told Paul that the big telecommunication players were just jealous of their
success. The stock value rose and rose. When Red Hat floated, Paul would have
his fortune. More money than stars.

But as sure as
day follows night, the numbers didn’t last. The market got shaky. Tech stocks
bled money. And there was the issue of other less liberal countries, 143
countries signing an international treaty banning Red Hat. The Securities
Commission shut down hits from outside the Netherlands, and in a week the
flood slowed to a trickle and then a drop. Nasdaq called it Red Tuesday. Jan
called it business.

Jan and Paul were
in the boardroom, Jan twiddling his coin in and out of his fingers. “Easy come.
Easy go,” he said. “Win some, lose some.”

Paul had vomited
in the bathroom when he had heard the news. He had gone from nothing to a
multi-millionaire to nothing all in the space of a week. “But the market will
go up again. We just ride it out. Right?”

Jan ignored.
“This is the one you like, isn’t it?” he asked. They were standing by the Van
Gogh print. “White House at Night.”

“Jan, we’ve lost
everything,” said Paul. “What does it matter about a painting? Stars, planets.
Who cares?”

Jan stared out
the window, finding Venus dangling above the trees, the lentil-shaped glass
pushed against his face. “Imagine, thinking a planet is a star?” He smiled,
pausing as if to enjoy Paul’s worry. “Did you know that someone worked out the
exact time when Van Gogh painted White
House at Night? Down to the minute, all from the angle and the brightness
of Venus from where Van Gogh lived in Auvers-sur-Oise?”

Paul scrunched
his face, still uncertain of Jan’s meaning. “Jan? What the hell has this to do
with anything?”

“Paul, Van Gogh
sold one painting in his life, The Red
Vineyard. One bloody painting, and today they sell him on everything from
coffee mugs to pencil erasers, and from T-shirts to video games.

“Jan?”

“One painting! He
went mad trying to capture his world. And for what? Who can count the clouds?
The painting is a photograph, the bookcase is a door, the planet is a star.”
Jan lifted his hand to Paul’s, pressing his palm firmly into his. “Don’t go
crazy over money Paul. It comes and goes.”

As they walked
out into the street, Jan continued about the happenstance of chance, saying
that failure wasn’t an obstacle but a stepping stone. Funny, it didn’t seem so
in the midst of failure, thought Paul. In the midst of having one’s world swept
away.

Paul looked back
along the canal, remembering that night, the night he had decided to pour
himself into work, the night he had found out about Myra. When day had turned to night.

“How can this
happen?” he shuddered. “How can life change so easily?”

Jan told him not
to worry, that being a player meant taking chances, taking hits, but most of
all knowing when to let go. They separated at the bridge—the same bridge Paul
had walked past that first night and everyday thereafter until Jan had pointed
out the short cut. Paul had no idea.

In the morning
when he checked, the market had stalled completely. Red Hat was down and out.
The officials showed up and carried off the equipment and pulled apart Red Hat.
They put Paul in a room with no window and he was given a court-appointed
lawyer. There were serious allegations about the affairs of Rode Hoed BV.

“Mr. Goodman. I’m
with the Securities Commission,” began the head officer. “We have been unable
to find Mr. de Witt, but I am afraid until we do we will have to detain you.” He
continued on about insider trading, Paul’s lawyer madly scribbling down the
details.

“What? This is
crazy.”

“Mr. de Witt sold
eighty-eight percent of Red Hat stock after the initial flotation, which,
although perfectly legal, would be most curious if he had any fore knowledge of
Red Tuesday.”

“Fore knowledge?
How could he? It was a hemorrhage. The entire tech industry tanked.”

“Well, it is most
fortuitous that he acted as he did. Perhaps a roll of the die, but we must
investigate.”

Paul believed in
cause and effect as sure as he believed in the order of the universe, in
gravity, in the clockwork of the heavens, in all that he had been told. He
couldn’t believe he had done wrong.

“I didn’t know,”
he said.

“The fine print,
Mr. Goodman,” offered the officer. “You had no problem advertising your price
in unreadable text, I’m surprised you didn’t read your own contract.” The irony
red-ripened as the officer continued. “Our records show that an eight-year old
boy watched Red Hat for thirty-six hours straight. I don’t know how anyone can
stay up that long let alone watch that crap, but there you have it, an
astronomical bill. You should count yourself lucky. You only lost what wasn’t
yours.”

Paul’s heart sank
at all the money he had lost, at the possibility of jail. The next day,
however, Jan’s lawyer cleared up the misunderstanding. Jan smiled and told Paul
not to worry, that failure breeds success, that tomorrow is another day.

“Easy come, easy
go. Is that it?” smiled Paul. He had no idea.

Myra - Paris

Dear Nell,

Great to see
you at Easter. Little did I know how my life would change so quickly when I got
to Paris. You
were right--just what the doctor ordered. I met this great guy Fabio and he
gave me a job right off working in the film biz. I can’t believe my luck. I
know what you’re thinking, but it’s not like that. He’s tall, dark, French,
rich, and all that, I guess what every woman wants, but he doesn’t seem
interested. Maybe gay? All the best ones are.

Even so, I’m
not ready, still hoping to hear from Paul. 36 days. No luck so far. I found out
he was working with Jan de Witt in Holland and
sent him an e-mail telling him I was in Paris,
but I haven’t heard back. I keep checking my in box, but nothing. Not so easy
to wash that man right out of your hair (yes--I did it, it’s orange and sheared
short). I cried for a whole week when I got here. Ah, enough of that. I
promised I wouldn’t cry anymore.

Paris is amazing. It’s true, the men go for anything with a pulse and
very quick with the lines. Fabio’s accent is to die for. My French is getting
better every day, enough so I can pass myself off without sounding too
American. Everything you read about the French is true. Guess I’ll have to keep
my head out of the clouds for a change.

I still can’t
believe I got a job right off. I met the whole cast of The Vampire Buddy Files and have been hanging out with Jasmine. She
has the most amazing wardrobe. We hung out in Cannes for a week at the festival. Incroyable.

6

THE MUSIC built
slowly to a series of sustained one-note reverb piano presses in vague melody,
sounding everything to all. He hadn’t heard until the traffic stopped. Elton
John? Jani? Zamphyr Stairway to Heaven?
Wonder Love by Flood? He ordered
another coffee, café au lait with
milk. He waited. Café Mer was on the Seine, an insider Parisian joke no American would get. Paris was full of traps
thought Paul, hating and loving in the same breath, ignoring meaning respect.

He could see Pont
St.-Michel through the window. He didn’t want to seem over eager, but his mind
fast forwarded to her coming. Would that the clock would fill up soon with
time. He asked for the same again. Café
au lait with milk.

He was eyeing the
traffic stopped outside, peering into cars and wondering what was ahead,
behind. A life, stopped, in stasis, as was his. His was expectant. How so the
others? The smoker. He dropped his match between his legs and cursed behind
when honked. He was on his way to meet a lover thought Paul. The nervous look
of excitement, double puffing. Out of time. Stuck in place. The polished woman
between appointments. She had money and was on her way for more. Sleek and
undisturbed by her own surround. The mobile recoiled quickly from her pocket
and she talked and changed and pushed on unaware of her dexterity. She didn’t
see him. The tired man passed Paul a sigh of shared wishing he was anywhere but
there. Caught in orange, his future known to a tick. Could his life ever change
as quickly as a light? Could he be free? Paul played at thinking, his own ahead
turning soon. Where had they been, where were they going, would they love
again? He hoped, but then, what then? Their future. Her smile. The dark?

It made him think
of the Mona Lisa, so close across the
bridge according to the map. He knew the numbers from leagues of Moo-lah Millions on television: Leonardo
da Vinci, 1503, La Gioconda, the
blurry lines dissolving dark and light, the smile. The smile, so many times in advertisement: anti-aging cream,
long-term investment wisdom, long-lasting deodorant, whiter than white
toothpaste, cottony soft toilet paper. “To taste beauty? To smell a dream? To
touch a life?” Was she indeed so near? What would it be like to enter the
sacred? He sipped his milky coffee, waiting, seeing himself standing in
adoration. And then the light sank and she disappeared, alone, in dark, again.

A mobile phone
brought him back. It was time—the clock said.

She was late but
he didn’t care. He breathed her smile. Paris.
Spring. A quarter turn since their first beginning. She threw her arms around
him, all giggles when they kissed, the world undone again.

“Of course, you
could have told me.”

“I just did.” The
forgiveness was beginning.

How could he say
no when she made bombs go off in her eyes and twisted her hair like that, now
Orange Passion—number six on the color scale, with spiked black tips.

“You’re not mad
at me?” The first kiss lingered. He wasn’t.

On the Seine, she told her story. “Warren,”
giggled Myra.
“He wore off. It wasn’t what you think. I’m sorry. I should have explained
better. Warren
asked me to go to this thing before I met you and I couldn’t say no. And then
you said what you said that night and I, I . . . we got our wires crossed.” The
bells rang up and down the river. “I’m sorry. It was his grandmother’s
eighty-eighth birthday. I couldn’t say no.” How could Paul?

The sounds rolled
by. Her eyes, her smell, so many rooms to enter. All his thoughts at once. Her
hand, assuredly, in his. It was like falling without thinking, as they sat on
the riverside, the sun dancing in and out of the busy crests and troughs.
Together.

“I’m working with
the Hollywood producer Fabio Negra. I was very
lucky to meet him,” Myra
continued. “He’s French and splits his time between Paris
and Los Angeles.”
Myra was his
personal secretary she told him, responsible for everything and permanently on
call, though there were perks—catwalk wardrobe, provincial wines, take-out
French fries from the Ritz. “They turn anorexic super models into gluttons.”
She lived in his luxury apartments overlooking the Seine—separate,
of course. She had already met Maxwell Montes and Diana Chasm from The Vampire Buddy Files, Fabio’s hit
television series, and the double Oscar-winner Jake Jones. The model Jasmine
and she did aerobic kick boxing together. “We’re doing a movie in Paris while VBF is on hiatus—The Fabulous Five Musketeers. It’s a life made in heaven.”

In the luxury
apartments, Myra
introduced Paul to Fabio the producer, who was far too busy to stop and chat.
Sunglasses permanently hid his eyes. Fabio would meet them tomorrow, precisely
as always in his usual café where he and Myra
had first met. They could see the sights and tell him all there was to tell.
Then. Not now.

“Paris is never what the
American thinks,” said Fabio as he hurried to the door. “It’s not the same as
the video. You have much to unlearn.” He was overly polite and quick, here and
there at once, rattling off a list of names for Myra to call for Tuesday’s shoot. “We’re set
for two o’clock on
location.” It wouldn’t do to be late, he intimated in fatherly tone as he
nodded up and down to Paul. He reminded her of their arrangement. Arrangement
wondered Paul?

Paul readied a
question, but before he could ask, Fabio was gone.

“He’s always like
that,” said Myra.
“You get used to it.”

She told Paul
about the shoot. They would be filming the grande
finale to TheFabulous Five Musketeers up Boulevard
St.-Michel to the famed Jardin du Luxembourg, scene of many a musketeer moment,
where Antoine the fabulous fifth musketeer saves the princess from the altar,
swashbuckles his way through the priestly swordsmen, and then rides out with
her draped on his shoulder, a league of bad French guards in mad pursuit. Myra had arranged the
church, got the permits for the street, made sure all the extras were in the
right seventeenth-century garb. All that was left was the shooting.

On the Seine-side
balcony, Myra
pointed out where she and Paul had met and the path where they had walked.
“There’s Pont St.-Michel and, beyond, the tunnel where Diana died. People still
leave flowers.” The whole of Paris
gently floated past.

“Quite
extraordinary the view,” said Paul. “I’ve never seen anything like it.”

“Fabio’s been
very good to me. I can’t believe I’m here.”

It seemed their
past had been forgotten, although there was an awkward moment when Myra told Paul of the
arrangement as prescribed by Fabio. Theirs was a business relationship and,
although fine to have a friend over on occasion, there could be no carry on.
Fabio the producer. Fabio the host. Fabio the chaperone inconnu. Paul was put in the east wing, a block from Myra. Exhausted as he was,
he made no claim, Myra’s
kiss sending him softly to his sleep.

In the morning,
the fresh May blew in the sounds from the streets and sun-lit Seine.
They breakfasted on the Tower-side balcony with full compliments of fruits and
cakes and ices and specialty Ethiopian plunger-pot coffee. Paul noticed her
hair. He commented on her clothes, her skirt, her comfortable Parisian panache.

“Even the Coca
Cola tastes better,” laughed Myra.
“Real glass bottles, though I really ought to be drinking Pepsi. It’s in the
contract. I suppose it’s just the same—water, sugar, color. All the stuff one shouldn’t.”

“Why Paris?” asked Paul.

“It was a dream.
You tell me—Buffalo or Paris?” She offered him half an orange and
poured more coffee.

“And you met this
Fabio character by accident?” Paul hadn’t meant to sound so bold.

“Just like that.”

Paul told her how
he had met Jan in Amsterdam.

“Just like that.”

“Who can explain
chance or fortune?” He told her about Red Hat, about the money, the madness,
before the calm returned again to their inquiry and they shared the eagerness
of the silence, like lovers. Again.

Myra broke away a
piece of left-over Easter chocolate, dangling it in her hand, her lips
moistening as Paul watched. “The chocolate is amazing—pépite de chocolat, pain au chocolat, truffles. How can American
chocolate taste so different?”

Paul stared out
over the balcony at the Tower he’d seen so many times in pictures. He couldn’t
believe he was in Paris
with her. A dream?

“Le jour attend, mon amour,” said
Myra. “Allons-y.” The sights. As if there was
anything else to see but her.

7

THE VENDORS flew
paper planes up and out and around in wide sweeping arcs imitating loftiness
with precision from the mounted Sacré-Coeur. Gulls cooed as the piped organ
drifted through the air. A tourist asked Paul to take a picture and he waited
for a break in the passing people, before holding them still within the lens.
Away, they stood by the railing and watched the distant Paris in landscape. Inside, sitting still
among the devout, the stained-lit ceiling stole across her face.

“If you wanted
me, why didn’t you say?” he asked. “And if you didn’t, why didn’t you say
that?”

“But you left? I
couldn’t say anything.”

“I had just lost
my job and you ran off with Warren.”

“I didn’t run off with Warren. I told you he had invited me out.”

“I didn’t leave
you.”

Their outrage
rose and fell.

“Remember the
Falls?” she asked. The organ piped in scale.

“I remember.”

“The layers of
ice water covering the trees and street. The mist, spraying up and out over the
bank, mesmerized by the cold. It was like a fairytale in slumber. You and me.”

“I remember,” he
said, before she continued with the happenings of that day, the two of them
lost forever in sunny, snowy smiles.

Their memories
weren’t the same. Paul said he had suggested the Canadian side of the Falls and
the hotel where the Queen of England had once stayed. Myra said the hotel was her idea. It was she
who had read about the Queen of England in The
Times. Since when did he care
about kings and queens of England?
They rose and fell again, their lives hurtling forward again as one. They both
remembered the endless breakfast served in bed and, then later, underneath, in
the caverns. To love. To stop time. They both agreed the Falls coated in the
white of winter was far better than in the swarming tourist days of summer.

“It was like
heaven frozen over,” she said.

“The Falls, just
you and me.” Their smiles met. Nothing could erase that day.

The Sacré-Coeur
service ended and the priest filed past behind the cross, the organ soothing
each breath of air. Paul leaned in for a kiss, still remembering their first
day. So many thoughts, so few words to speak them. As their lips pressed
together, she felt the water again like thunder, multiplied by echo up and down
the Gothic chamber. Was he the one? Was she?

They returned by
Metro to the Seine, and strolled arm in arm up
the Champs Élysées, before walking under the circulation of cars to the Arc de
Triomphe, Paul counting steps as they clicked forward with the throngs.

“I love it here,”
she exclaimed. “Paris,
you can feel it. The Champs Élysées, La Défense, and there, look, the Tower.”
Her hands pointed out the proud edifice. “Is there anywhere like here? I could
hold it forever.” Her face was full of song as she stared out over the sights,
her body pressed to his.

Paul’s thoughts
were more intense, his smile contained. He wanted to take more in, not so
sudden at pronouncement. Leaning back, his face falling into hers, he whispered,
“Paris is
nothing compared to you.” Such words to tell another.

“There’s more,”
she said, and like all good men, he was thinking of what came next. Below, Myra read the inscription
to the Unknown Soldier, the flames shooting out in honor.

The Louvre was
next they both agreed. Inside, the walk was brisk, too much to take in all at
once. They crossed carefully the infinity of captured sights: Venus de Milo (adoringly disarmed), the bright orange and yellow
melancholic Fauvist flower women, Leonardo’s beauty—the Mona Lisa. Her. No Paris without her smile.
They pushed forward and settled in front, their bodies joined like spoons.
There were hundreds angling for the best of views. Couples astride the smile,
all mad about the Mona.

“All artists are
taught to look at things back to front. Not so hard.” Paul held her closer.
“Look. Up a bit.” She pointed to a corner. “They say there is another painting,
hidden underneath. Imagine, underneath the Mona Lisa, another?” She smiled, Paul’s gaze intensifying as he outlined her
lips. “Some say she may even be Leonardo dressed as a woman.”

“It’s more
impressive in person,” he said. “Even underneath all the protection.”

“Oh. Indeed, much
more so.” She pulled his hand across. “Look, there, in the middle, the face,
the deep wonder. Oh, and the smile. So wonderfully soft, so content, so
gorgeous.” Her words slowed. They were all gushing by Mona’s side.

Outside the Louvre,
she called him to her arms. “Paris.
So easy to fall in love.”

They walked along
the Seine twinned again in hand, drifting
nearer Notre-Dame. The sun played along the noisy water and becalmed traffic,
as tourists mingled in metronomic Paris
beat. Notre-Dame was not so full, thankfully, they said, after an afternoon of
crowds in Montmartre and the Louvre. They
walked the steps, Paul counting as they climbed. Atop, by the bell chamber,
they stared at the ever-slipping river.

“Look. You can
see for miles. And the Tower. So bold rising up from among the trees.” Paul
leaned his head back prone, an eager orange breaking through the distance. He
stood transfixed.

“It’s beautiful.
I wonder how tall it is?” she asked.

Paul knew the
figures. “It was the tallest structure in its time until the EmpireStateBuilding. Built by Gustav
Eiffel in 1898. Some say man’s greatest triumph.”

“Really?” Myra’s eyes brightened at
the stiffened view, a bird fluttering as the clock hammer clicked forward and
the bells suddenly rang out the time in twos, a gong and then an echo rippling
on.

The sound
startled them. She laughed and moved closer in embrace, not wanting their
togetherness to end. Descending down the stairs, they both mouthed the same—the
Tower itself was next.

On ground, he
brought her near, making an attempt at words. “It takes your breath.”

“Yes. Paris. You and me.” To
love and walk she thought. To be alone with him. To have him, hold him. “To
be.”

They crossed the
Seine at Pont St.-Michel and meandered up the boulevard, Myra
pointing out the church where they would be filming on Tuesday the storming of Paris by musketeers of
old. The light was beginning to dim, but the sun still poured its brightness
and the cafés still bulged with people as the streets brimmed fun. They decided
a break was due and stopped in the Jardin du Luxembourg. No better place to end
a film than the old palatial gardens between Notre-Dame and Montparnasse
where the Sun King and his court lived and entertained in days of glory. Myra said again how lucky
she had been. Fabio had been brilliant, taking her here and there, introducing
her, showing her, telling her. Fabio the ever-ready guide. Monsieur Michelin,
thought Paul.

They took chairs
to the back and to the left in the concrete strand, an array of trees keeping
them separate from the crowds. They watched as families in Sunday clothes
played by the Fontaine de Medicis, the sun splashing in and out. A game
of men’s boules stirred on the clay walk afoot.

She stroked his
hair and whispered for his silence and they slept a while, before the
sun-splashed shrieks pierced their ears again. Myra leaned back and let the light fall full
across her face, digging a brilliant warmth as her mouth turned aglow. She
could see a little boy playing with a boat in the water. She smiled as he
splashed around. Her eyes lit up a playful dance.

“Do you like it?”
asked Myra. She
wanted him to like it. “I adore it here,” she soothed.

“It’s beautiful,”
said Paul, the sun playing on his forehead as he filled his lungs again with
breath. “You’re beautiful.” He laid
his head again by hers.

“Ah, I can feel
it shining through.”

She held him
closer in caress, before their faces met again in smiles.

They giggled when
they realized they had been at it for hours, walking and wading in the gentle
life of Sunday Paris.

“Next stop the
Tower?”

“Yes. The Tower.”

When they arrived
at Tour Eiffel, the crowds had
thinned, but there was still a wait. They waited locked in embrace as the line
grew closer. They took the stairs—349 the first level and 359 the next—and then
the elevator to the top and, with the others, spun spoked Paris round, before
returning to the second level and the quiet of a less-discovered view. They
settled on a corner of the North, the holed La Défense in sight.

“That’s toward
Sacré-Coeur,” pointed Myra.
“Remember?” She smiled. “Can you see Fabio’s? Are we as high?” asked Myra.

Paul did the
numbers as he stared down, his heart skipping at the openness below. “Well,
you’re on the fifth floor and we’re at about 200 feet, so at about forty feet a
floor … about the same.”

Their hearts were
hurtling together once more.

It was Myra’s idea to get the
string of pictures in the Photomaton and they stayed inside the curtain forever
kissing and taking pictures. Didn’t everyone do that? And then they danced,
slowly in circled trance as the sights swirled, both wondering how the tower
had grown so quiet and how the crowds had disappeared so quickly.

“Paul? You know,
I think we’re alone,” whispered Myra.
They stilled their dance and listened to the nothingness blanketed around them.
The tower had closed down.

“Alone?”
whispered Paul. “Together.”

“You and me atop
the world,” she laughed, her blue eyes firing flames.

Holding her in
his arms, he called out his stars. “I’ve been following them since I got to Europe.”

“How do you know
they’re the same?” she asked.

“Because they’re
always there. Look. Just there.” He traced her hand with his and pointed with a
smile. “I don’t know their names. They could be you and me.”

“Us.”

Paul’s stars were
easy to spot, even if the earth had moved in turn since Holland. The latitude and longitude
difference from Amsterdam to Paris was minor, but the orbiting earth had
put them four minutes higher in the sky each day. Since the first time Paul had
seen them, they had moved two hours. In half a year, they would oppose the sun
and disappear from view, but for now, Paul’s two wandering stars, Jupiter and Saturn, were just there.
Already, Paul had forgotten Venus, setting in plain view behind La Défense.

There was no
mistaking what came next. Their love was slow and lasted until the sun-rayed
dawn. Making love in water and now in air, they were twined in space, two as
one stopping the rush of time.

With the
Photomaton curtain for a blanket and the candle Paul had stolen from the
Sacré-Coeur, they shared the night, falling in and out of sleep and love and
pressed together like flowers in a book. Music soared above the city. Venus
fell and rose. Nowhere was higher in the sky.

“Did you know
that time flows?” said Myra.

“Sorry?”

“Most people
think time ticks, because of their pulse, but in fact time flows.” As they lay
together wrapped in arms, she told him the story of a doctor who replaced
broken hearts with motors. “The electric motor sends out a continuous stream of
blood. There’s no pulse to count the beats. If you feel for a pulse you won’t
feel one, but instead you feel a stream pushed like water in a river.” She
laughed. “It’s just the same with time.” Who else but Myra for him to share his soul? Time and love
like rivers?

The candle
flickered as they made love again, the metal tower clanging in the wind. As Myra watched him move on top, Paul watched her face and
saw bright Paris
alive inside. In the center of man most triumphant, draped in a hollow pyramid
of rusted metal, their story sang.

“Did you know
that because the universe is infinite, we are always at the center?”

Here, in the in
between of time, she thought, their love could last forever.

Myra woke first. They
had ascended and descended, but the love was over. A morning schoolgirls’ tour
was beginning.

“Ah, the pose.
Man descends morning naked,” smiled Myra.
Her face was full of life and spring.

“A beautiful
day,” said Paul. Fabio’s name had come up only once.

8

ON THE SEINE-SIDE
BALCONY, he finished his coffee at the same time as the clock hands met and
believing this to mean something very great he told her. She said the same.
They had said so a week ago that morning atop the Tower. She liked to hear it
and knew if he said just so before Notre-Dame rang out, then their love was
real. He had wanted to say it when he first awoke, but Fabio was still
forbidding of any nightly encounters. Theirs was an outdoor love and indoor
propriety. No matter, Paul had said he loved her when she had wanted. As
champion, he had performed as promised upon request.

“Nothing is
chance,” said Myra
as they strolled up Boulevard St.-Michel. “It is all by plan. I believe that.
As for the film business, rain is always to be expected.”

They were in the
fifth day of shooting the final five minutes, having been delayed by the
too-fresh May. The production chaplain was inciting prayers for the sky to hold
as the cast and crew swallowed coffee and waited in the Café Mer for battle.
Another truck dumped a load of dirt over the anachronistic details of
post-musketeer Paris.
Fabio was being wildly snippish. As producer, his job was to see that the
unscheduled didn’t happen. On headset, Myra
waited for any word.

“One hour,
everybody,” she yelled. “We have the all clear for one hour. Rain or shine.”
Rain was hurriedly being written into the script.

There was
some worry that Athos and Porthos had not yet shown, having spent the night
carousing in an all-night club on an anniversary of sorts. As professionals, no
one doubted their eventual reappearance, but the sand was falling. Myra and Fabio called in
fretted turns to ascertain their whereabouts.

In the corner,
Jake Jones, who played D’Artagnan, and his agents were negotiating new deals
with Fabio’s team of lawyers. Diana Chasm, who played the female Arama, was
breathing deeply in and out, tuning her performance motivation and repeating to
herself, “I am Diana Chasm. I am Diana Chasm.” She wasn’t taking any chances
with this part, her first major minor movie role in five years. And she was up for
the part of Mother Theresa—The Middle Years, another Fabio Negra
Production. A good review here would do her well. Antoine, the fabulous fifth
musketeer and token Frenchman, was doing yet another interview for TV5. Spread
out on a makeshift bed, Maxwell Montes was asleep. They were all in costume,
puffed up, ready at a moment’s notice for the call to action.

“Such a fanciful
city, Paris.
Chevaliers, dashing men of arts and letters,” said Fabio, his orange paper
cotton suit pressed in perfect fashion. “Who can say no to a swashbuckler—the
ne’er do well who stakes honor and chivalry for all?” Paul strained to see into
Fabio’s eyes.

“Oh, I think not.
It wouldn’t do to apply modern American gutter thinking to the works of
romantic adventure. Just because we have an idea what they’re up to behind the camera, doesn’t mean we know
their character any more.” Fabio’s dismissal came with a cold aside to an
overloaded underling.

As the talk
turned to the ethos of Fabio’s success, Paul could see the stirring. Fabio’s
show, The Vampire Buddy Files, was
number one. Fabio was the new it in Hollywood.

“Americans think
vampires are real,” announced Fabio, straightening his cuffs and collar as he
talked. “And so, by natural extension, vampires must have real lives, the whole
talk show list of valid feelings and repressed emotions. In America, vampires must have
friends.”

“But not
well-adjusted enough to escape their urges?” smiled Myra.

“Precisely. And
since vampires are bad, we must hunt them down and kill them. America where everyone is beautiful
and yet full of sin. No one goes unpunished for their perfection.” Fabio smiled
and leaned over as he whispered. “And, of course, all laid out within the
hour.”

Right off, they
hadn’t liked each other, Paul and Fabio, dislike repelling dislike, though if
Paul thought about it, his dislike of
Fabio was more Fabio’s dislike of
him. Must he defend his honor?

“I thought there
were only four musketeers?” said
Paul.

“Three actually,
but who’s counting? In America,
as long as they have friends and save the princess, everyone’s happy. So what
if it’s made up? Hang Dumas and history. Americans like the personal, the
battle within. Besides, we need the
numbers for the sequel. In the sequel, it will be revealed that Antoine is
D’Artagnan’s long-lost, illegitimate son. And Arama his twin.” Fabio stared
outside as the rain continued to scribble down the windows.

“And women have
no place other than as princesses and damsels in distress?” smiled Paul. He
hadn’t cared, but it was all he could think to say to continue their parley.

“We are all
Prince Charmings to an endless cast of Cinderellas. But that’s where Diana’s
Arama character comes in for the little girls who like to play at
swashbuckling. Hollywood
covers all the angles. I see a spinoff Saturday morning cartoon.”

“I never thought
of the musketeers as the original Mod
Squad,” replied Paul.

“If only—The Mod Squad played five years,”
laughed Fabio. “Hey, it’s business. In the end, it’s always down to numbers.”

“Of course,
nothing in itself. Only a means to satisfy the appetite for more.”

Paul thought his
foray apt, although Fabio had the upper hand, and let the subject fall,
rebuffing the young Paul without word. He tucked his flowered cravat into his
bright orange chemise and turned his head. Fabio had the perfect foil, the work
at hand, thousands of dollars rolling per second. He turned to Myra, in conversation on
the phone, still hunting for the missing musketeers. Athos and Porthos were
still nowhere to be found.

But as Paul asked
the waiter for another café au lait
with milk, Fabio’s sneer brought an instant reply.

“I’m talking to
security now,” Myra
called out, stuffing a long chocolate bunny head into her mouth as she talked.
“They have two oddly attired men claiming to be musketeers … I don’t believe it
… they’re still in costume.”

Paul poured his
milk into his cafe au lait.

“Non, you must not do this,” said Fabio.
“Please. One can not drink coffee like this.”

Paul called for
the waiter with his hands.

“Non, non. One does not snap. Please.”

“They’re okay.
They haven’t been to bed, but they’re on their way,” continued Myra, whispering as she
unh-huhed Fabio’s requests. The missing musketeers were being rushed on set.
“Why do you want to upset him,” Myra
whispered across to Paul. “You should apologize.”

“Apologize?”

“Next, you’ll be
challenging him to a drinking contest. Honestly Paul.”

The news about
Athos and Porthos began ringing out like bells as Fabio clapped for the crew to
depart.

“You know, love
is the most egotistical of passions,” said Fabio, drawing in a last sip of
coffee before preparing his departure to the set. “The ego is overblown lest we
mistake anger for the heart. That’s what we do in film … Paul. We play
the romance that is in everybody’s heart. It’s no mystery. We sell dreams. We
sell the heart.” Fabio the flaming philistine philosopher. Paul nodded his
defeat. The rain scribbled down some more.

Fabio smiled and
invited Paul to the church to watch the final scene. Paul was instructed
exactly where to stand.

Places were
called and, as the cameras readied, the sun broke through, seen by all as a
great sign of good fortune. Action was called and the young Antoine threw open
the church door. Seeing Maxwell Montes the Cardinal at the altar with the
princess, the young Antoine called for the wedding to stop and the Inseparables cum Mod Squad unsheathed
their swords in unison. The fight began.

All were happy
with what they saw. Myra
imagined the sex, swords standing in for the unmentionable of
seventeenth-century custom. Paul was in awe as the static came alive in Hollywood real. He couldn’t
believe he was there, behind
the scene, to the back and to the left of the church as the action passed, and
would be, evermore, like an unseen
cherub in the corner. Fabio did the maths—that is, how much The Fabulous Five Musketeers would take
in: eighty-eight screens first week in full American release and, thereafter,
worldwide. And then re-released in video. If all went well, he could finance
his plans for a Vampire Buddy Files movie.

Alas, the scene
had to be redone as Porthos stumbled on Antoine’s lines and then again when
Athos failed to unsheath in time, having struck himself in the head with the
butt of his sword. The blood could stay, the director said, it was a fight
scene after all, and the editor would cut out what didn’t work. Diana Chasm, the
girl-pulling Arama, was her usual perfect self and Maxwell Montes, as always, a
paragon of stars. He didn’t play Richelieu, he wasRichelieu.

“Of course,
the question is,” whispered Fabio to Paul as the action swept past the door,
“What would you give up for love? For what would you fight another at the
altar?”

“What?” said
Paul.

“Love is simple.
The ups and downs of l’amour, bien sûr, but what would you give up
for love? … Forsake all others? What of sickness, or poverty, separated by time
or place? Betrayal?” Fabio smiled. “Or nothing half so complicated as the
repetition of days.” By any definition, what can a man go without for the love of a woman? The ultimate test of love.” The repetition of days remembered
Paul.

Paul eyed
Fabio suspiciously as he readied his reply. The test of love? To be there, to
honor, to respect, to love no other. Alas before Paul could answer, Fabio
disappeared again on set.

After five more
takes to cover the excesses and missed lines of the over-celebrated Porthos and
Athos, the grand entrance scene was wrapped and they turned to the exit scene,
the grand finale up ancienParis. The rain was now
lashing as the mud streamed in channels down the street.

Myra explained to
Paul. “We do this scene from eight angles and cut it together afterward. The
rain is okay, it creates a feeling. The editor will cut in the sunny close-ups
in studio. As Antoine and the princess ride away, it will appear that the sun
is beginning to shine—everybody’s happy ending as the lovers ascend into
ordained light.”

The anti-nuke
demonstration had been planned for months as well and had also worried about
the rain. As Antoine rode out with the princess, they turned the corner onto
Boulevard St.-Michel, sounding more fizzled than fanfare behind their banner
and drumming band. There were one hundred thousand who had come from across France
to protest the transportation of radioactive waste through town and pastoral
countryside. It was their right, their duty, to say no to a government they
believed had gone mad. As the heavens lashed down, demonstrator met musketeer.
Horses stumbled in the mud and broke their reigns. Antoine dropped the
princess. Ever distrustful of authority, the demonstrators mistook the
musketeers and Richelieu’s guard for the real gendarmerie, and began a hand charge.
All for one was a free for all. The director had not yet yelled “cut.”

When the gendarmerieverités came, the street was a soup of muddied confusion. Paul and Myra were caught in the middle, pushed forward to the Seine by the fighting demonstrators, some now brandishing
captured swords, and pulled back by the gendarmerie,
who were clearing people by the truckload from the street. The beasts had gone
wild. It was a seesaw of carnage and cinematic wonder. Riderless horses brayed
and stormed about smashing windows and overturning carriage props.
Demonstrators chased extras, unsure who was who. In the crowds near the river,
Paul pulled Myra
up onto a statue to keep her from being crushed and they watched the madness
from above. The demonstrators sang LaMarseillaise. The gendarmerie locked hands. The street
poured mud and rain.

The day’s shoot
made the news. It wasn’t Myra’s
fault, but Fabio did suggest that she had had other things on her mind. Myra’s job was to know
about such demonstrations during shooting, even with all the delays. Paul was
mentioned, Fabio questioning if their arrangement had been kept. All in all,
Fabio knew the publicity was good. He knew Myra had done well. He knew he couldn’t buy
publicity this good. Hundreds of demonstrators were thrown in jail, a real
rebel cardinal among them and the story made Live at Five, the top infotainment show in Hollywood. Fabio’s maths were getting better
by the minute.

9

THE NEXT DAY in
Café Mer, Paul and Myra replayed the day’s adventure, a movie in itself, until
the quiet talk returned and their thoughts drifted to another replay of their
past. It seemed they hadn’t replayed enough.

“I wrote you a
poem,” said Paul. “You were Aphrodite.”

“I tried writing
you but I couldn’t. Every letter I crumpled up. I couldn’t get the words to
come out right,” said Myra.

Then came the
paperweight. “I didn’t throw it. It fell. I’m sorry. I couldn’t believe the
window broke.”

He saw her eyes
beckon his. She had tried to call.

“A kind word,
easily given, easily taken. You left without a word,” she said. “What was I to
think? Where was I to find you?” What could they give up for love?

“If you loved me
why didn’t you say? Why the limbo?”

“I e-mailed you
in Holland.”

She explained the
chance that led her back, Jan’s e-mail inquiring about Wayne Templeton. She had
been on a list. He told her that he hadn’t got her e-mail until his last day in
Holland. They
told their stories. They came clean on what had been said and not said between them.

“Jan made it all
so attractive. I should have known. It was impossible to say no.”

“I was looking
just as we are now at Our Lady when I met Fabio.”

Their minds mimed
significance. How in all the world had they ended up here in Paris together? Imperfect Paul, imperfect Myra, in perfect Paris.
Could they follow and lead in equal parts? Circle each other, back and forth.
What were they willing to give up for love? She saw once more the morning sun
atop the metal tower with her naked man, ascending.

“I waited here
that first day for you,” said Paul when the rain had finished.

“Sorry?”

“I was waiting
here in the café before we met at Pont St.-Michel. Just here.”

“You’re saying I
was late?”

“No. I wasn’t
saying that.”

That was how it
started then. Headlong in their own, they forgot the other. It was a
continuation from the shoot the day before when she said he had insulted Fabio
and the day before that in the Jus d’Orange when Paul and Fabio had disagreed
on a painting. And then Paul had made a list and given it to her. The list. He
knew he shouldn’t have.

“You’re saying
I’m always late.”

“I’m not saying
that. Come on, Myra.
People are looking.”

“They’re French.”

“So?”

“So, they don’t
understand.”

“You don’t have
to be French to understand an argument. Besides, one doesn’t look in French.”

Myra scrunched her
face. “You don’t look in any
language.”

“Exactly. Come
on. You’re making a scene.”

“A scene?” she
yelled.

The
cater-cornered tables looked on. An American television writer, who was
scouting locations for a movie, pricked up his ears. He was wearing a bright
orange and white tie-dye shirt, his graying pony-tail tucked in the back of a Giants baseball cap. He wrote down every
word he heard.

“Myra. My love.”

“Love? Love is honor. Love is respect.”
She poured her list. “Possessed by
possession. You don’t know the meaning.”

He had said the
wrong thing, meaning one, saying another, then trying to undo, but too late
and, now, having to explain the meaning to what was said but not meant, instead
of what wasn’t said, what he had meant
to say.

The argument
circled again. “I didn’t mean that. Can’t we go back?”

“Go back?”

“Yes. Back.
Rewind. Cut. Edit. Remember?” But they were thrown forward and the stiffness
spiked. They rose and fell. She, the heave of the shoulders and dewy hint of
tears, and he, the brow of desperation for what he had done, followed by the
crossed eyes for how he had
done what he had done. The flood of sorrow held back by the gate of contrition
as they navigated the lake of indifference. Quelle
triste. The cause and effect of love. What could they give up for love?

They drank their
coffees in silence. Until the next.

“Myra?”

“And another
thing, I wasn’t trying to make you jealous. You said you didn’t mind if Fabio
came with us.”

“And what was I
supposed to say when you announced that he was coming? As if I can say what a
Matisse painting means with Fabio the Frenchman telling me he’s practically related.
I’m sick of Fabio the fantastic, Fabio
the ever present. So my father and Matisse weren’t friends? The painting meant
what it meant to me.”

“But you said you
didn’t mind him coming.”

“I said that
because I did and I wanted you to see that.”

“Oh really Paul.
And now I’m a mind reader?”

The fight was not
as ugly as it could have been, Paul and Myra conscious of their nationality,
world super power and all, pax Americana
and the accompanying reputation, but her looks were ice-queen perfection
(“Didn’t he know what she was going through as an assistant producer of a
Hollywood movie?”), her batted eyes topping his frowns of confusion (“Didn’t she know what it was like to play the
extra, stuck in with the costumes and left-over bread sticks and pea soup?) Apparently
not. Apparently, neither knew the other’s burden.

On they argued,
as they traipsed along the Seine, the hidden
revealed, the pulling pushing perfection. She wanted to take the scenic boat
and he didn’t. He wanted to spend the night together, without worrying about
the arrangement. Next was her makeup and his fashion, her forthrightness, his
defensiveness. They searched their pockets for the sticky tack, the Super Glue
that held their love together. What was the compound, the equation, the chemistry,
the physics? He grabbed her hand, wrapping her palm uneasily in his. What could
they give up for love?

10

THE CHANDELIER
wasn’t crystal, but the crown glass still bent light, throwing blurs of
stretched color across the party-goers. “All for one and one for all,” cried
Porthos as the light sprayed bright reds and greens and blues. Athos caught him
when he fell, kissing him full in mock favor. The wrap party in Fabio’s
apartment was a mad success.

“Ladies and
gentlemen, Mesdames et Messieurs,”
the star Jake Jones called out, “May I introduce to you our host, the
Emmy-award winning and hopefully soon to be Oscar-winning producer, from his
modest beginnings in the salons of Paris, doctor, lawyer, connoisseur d’amours, artiste
extraordinaire, Monsieur Fabio Negra.”

Warm applause
dribbled through Fabio’s welcoming remarks as the fish sandwiches sliced in pain de mie and individually-wrapped in
grease-proof edible Japanese paper were passed around by the Miss Ethiopia
Hospitality Service, their black and white tight outfits playing delicate
counterpoint to the film set’s fashion extremes. The service guaranteed each
hostess had been a bona fide pageant contestant and that one in fact had been a
real Miss Ethiopia.
Another had been a fifth runner-up Miss World Miss Congeniality.

Paul and Myra were talking to the model Jasmine on the Tower-side
balcony about the latest yoga styles, Jasmine having just finished a shoot in
the streets of Addis Ababa
for her new Jasmine Yoga Lotus Wear.

“Oh, we discount
for the Third World. We can mark everything up
fifty dollars and still be swimming in it,” she said, chomping away on a chat
stick dipped in cheese. “It only costs five cents to make a full-length body
suit. But advertising eats everything.” She looked nothing like the May Pout magazine cover spread thought Paul,
her black hair bleached of color, though, as he thought about it, perhaps white
was her natural color.

Paul was trying
to look cool. Myra
had dressed him with a new buy, and they both wore black, he a suit and she a
Jasmine sheer original yoga dress. Her orange lipstick was her only makeup.
They had made up in the Promenade des
Plantes, awakening in love again that morning, their silly lovers’ tides
forgotten.

“I brought out my
own collection because I was tired of throwing out new garments every week,”
continued Jasmine. “I wanted something I could wear more than once a season.”
More light sprayed up and down the walls as Athos caught Porthos again.

Jasmine’s new
man, the fabulous fifth musketeer Antoine, whose real name oddly enough was
Antoine, was standing with them on the balcony. “Myra, you must come and visit me in the
country,” he said. “The south of France is completely different than
here. You would adore it. You and Fabio.”

“Yeah, it’s south,” said Paul, though no one heard.
He was used to being ignored.

“Why thank you
Antoine,” said Myra.
“Of course, I would love to.”

Paul knew he was
superfluous to the conversation, but stuck it out anyway, thinking that
silently extricating himself would be more discourteous than interrupting and
then being ignored. Eventually he asked, “Did the film go well, as films go?”
No one heard.

“Oh, I’m so
looking forward to playing a vampire next season,” smiled Jasmine, dabbing
freely at an uncooperative excess of cream cheese on her tongue. “I think
Fabio’s amazing for giving me a part.”

“You’ll be the
best un-dead who ever lived,” said
Antoine, squeezing his hand up her back. No one had heard when Paul had said
just the same.

In another
orchestrated recitation, Maxwell Montes thanked Fabio on behalf of all the cast
and crew and called for a short meditation moment, before the inimitable Fabio
made another speech, thanking among others the delicious Myra.

Afterwards, in
circle again, Fabio produced a small set of glittering earrings, which he
clipped to Myra’s
ears, Paul watching her blush appear and recede in equal astonishment.

The horoscope
talk came next, everyone applauding Myra
for her abilities to keep the cast and crew in wonderful Libran sync.

“I’m a Gemini,”
said Jasmine. “I’d have the actors screaming at me in seconds.”

“Well, sometimes,
I think I must be anything but
Libra,” said Myra.
“You know, I’m so naïve, always having to be cruel to be kind.”

“In this
business, you need everything you can get,” said Fabio, his hand extending
above Myra’s
back. The light from the chandelier was now fully eclipsed by his stance above
her. “I see great things ahead for you, my dear.”

Paul knew he was
no good at playing regardez-moi, smiling on cue, saying the scripted
lines, and so excused himself, slipping out during Fabio’s rehash of Myra’s greatness, her
handling of the grande finale up
Boulevard St-Michel. In the corner of the Seine-side balcony, he found Diana
Chasm standing by herself.

“Fame, fortune.
It didn’t used to be,” she said. “It used to be about story, love of art. Now,
it’s all celebrity. Who’s who.”

“Sorry?” said
Paul.

“When did we get
so full?” she said.

Paul told her
that his presence there was by association. “I’m an outsider. I wouldn’t know
an actor from an extra. Fabio Negra? Who’s he?” He hadn’t recognized her in the
dim night light.

“Oh, Fabio’s
okay,” she said. “Soupe du jour, real
B.O., but at least he knows it. You have to play it up while you can in this
business. Believe me, he’s one of the better ones. I’ve seen worse, my dear,
much worse.” She pointed out the bustle and intrigue of who would end the night
with whom, actors fighting for the extras, boys and girls in rented clothes
looking for a leg up the production ladder. “It’s not as chivalrous as you
might think. There’s no ‘She has given her pledge kind sir and I accept
defeat. Pray enjoy each other.’ No, life here is taken like a slice of
fruit. But it’s film. Everyone loves the twinkle.”

“B.O.?” asked
Paul.

“Box office my
dear. Real box office.”

Paul’s heart
skipped a beat as he finally recognized to whom he had been talking “Diana Chasm? You’re Diana Chasm?” It was
all he could think to say.

“Yes I am. I am
Diana Chasm.” The words echoed in his ears.

He saw her
sitting top and left in her seat on Celebrity
Moo-lah Millions, where she had been for five years before her role on The Vampire Buddy Files. What was the
line from her famous commercial he tried to recall? What was it? Come on. The
line?

She continued
with the most recent intrigue of who was sizing up whom. Did Paul know that two
actors had changed partners in the middle of filming? Live at Five, bless them, were already two liaisons and five weeks
out of date. “Why do men always go for the puffy-lipped, big-breasted, giggling
blondes,” she said, her face stretched in disdain as she eyed Maxwell Montes
snaking on the dance floor with his latest, a 2nd assistant script girl. “All he
needs is a life to go with the lifestyle,” she chided in whispered breath.

That’s right,
remembered Paul, they had been married before—Maxwell Montes and Diana Chasm. Incroyable.
Here he was, Paul Goodman, standing beside Diana Chasm and talking to her about Maxwell Montes. But the line. What was the
line?

As Diana
continued itemizing her ex’s past infidelities, Paul remembered. Yes, the Liberty bar commercial: Fluff so light, … you’ll float away.
That was it. He wondered would she say the line and, in a blurted moment, he
asked, wishing immediately that he hadn’t.

“Really? Maxwell
Montes is seeing Jasmine? I thought Jasmine was seeing Antoine de Gascon?” he replied. “And … didn’t we just see Maxwell
Montes with … some girl?”

Diana Chasm
laughed. “Please. Fabio knows the publicity. Antoine is the new star. He has to
be shown in light for tomorrow’s tabloid.” Diana Chasm poured back her drink.
It wasn’t like that in the old days she continued. Not like that at all.

What old days,
thought Paul? Black and White, the machine gun adventure, buddy-buddy decade of
he-man stars, parts I, II, III, the blockbuster, cross-over, feel-good weepies
with the soft-lens starlettes and retro-soundtrack, dance-hall remix
Sensurround, Smellavision? To what era could Diana Chasm be referring to as old days? She couldn’t be that old.

“If you want to
know what is really going on, my dear,” she added. “Look to the love scenes.
The eyes never lie.” The eyes, thought Paul as he left the faded drunken star
alone on the balcony.

Eventually, Myra came looking for him
and she and Paul spun around the floor in dance, her new earrings bouncing
sparks of light. They transited a square, the dancing spilling in and out of
party rooms. They moved among the bodies, trading blissful eyes and exploding
smiles.

“Did you know
that Foucault turned the world?” said Myra
in the quiet in between of songs. “In the Panthéon, he hung an iron ball from
the ceiling and watched the earth move, turning ever-so-slightly as the
pendulum swung back and forth.” Paul told her he had never heard of Foucault.
“Neither had I until I went to the Panthéon. The Greeks thought the earth was
round—they even calculated the circumference—and Copernicus determined the
earth went round the sun, but not until Foucault did man prove the earth turned
on its own axis. Imagine, night and day made from earth and not the heavens.”
They were kissing as she spoke. “I met Fabio there. The day my life turned from
night to day.”

“Fabio,”
said Paul. “Do you think we could have one conversation without you mentioning
his name? MonsieurFabio the Magnificent.”

Myra ignored,
laughing as she pulled him closer. She told him to forget Fabio, that she was
there with him, that she loved him and had always loved him. To be slain by the
simplicity of words.

They could have
stayed locked forever trading feelings, but after more impromptu speeches by
various cast and crew, the trouble began. Always kind Fabio, as Myra called him, had been
robbed. The gendarmerie were on the
way.

Fabio was talking
to Paul, having cut in on their dancing, redoing his dramatic bit on what a man
could give up for love. “Love makes fools of us all,” he said. “Some spill
their love in words. Some look down, others up. Some love in hopelessly
forgiving arms.” He added that l’amour
malconstrue comes when love was mistaken for comfort. Pas de problème for Fabio the Stylist, avec sa mise
en plie. “Some must move to be still,” continued Fabio, letting drop that
suspicion about the robbery fell on a certain character, an Aries whose
jealousy had got the better of him.

The necklace had
been on loan for the evening and was worth a king’s ransom. A Fabio Negra
Production through and through. The script was being rewritten as the cameras
rolled thousands of dollars per second.

“The only battle
is with oneself,” said Paul, nobly, ready. He didn’t believe Fabio was serious.
“Honest, I haven’t got a clue what you’re on about.” Could he stand and fight? En garde. Touché. Point. Could he take
on the inimitable Fabio, Monsieur Elegance? But if he did, what of Myra? And what then of the
shambles of her world? To understand what one could give up in a second. No,
best retreat, thought Paul. Best to understand before heeding any call to
battle. “Surely, you must be mistaken. Why would I?”

“Money is as good
a motive as any. But no, I think not.” The accusations grew more unsettled.
“Instant gratification is the mark of a psychopath,” announced Fabio.

Myra urged Paul to say
nothing, her calm blue eyes rounding her well-formed mouth, putting harmony to
the test. She knew Fabio’s excesses and had seen underneath the exterior, but
what was that to a career in film? She had not yet gauged the seriousness, the
intent. Yes, Paul was her love. What could she give up for love?

“Are you sure
Fabio?” tried Myra.
“There must be an explanation. Why would Paul …”

Fabio cut her off
in mid-word. “Sure?Myra, I don’t make up stories. Je n’accuse pas.”

Myra again suggested
calm, but as champion and in his haste to do right, Paul saw no other option
but to take flight, impatience ever the betterment of man. He was no thief, but
Fabio was bent on some form of humiliation in front of all. The stage had been
readied. There was no corner in which to hide. No dignified exit. The
musketeers were nowhere to be found.

After a commotion
by the door, Paul slipped out, hiding in the shadows of the hallway as the gendarmerie climbed passed in hurried
step. He lowered himself out a window and scurried down a drainpipe, Myra meeting him minutes
later in the street.

“Paul what have
we done?” she said. “I can’t believe it. This is madness. My job. My life.” She
struck his chest and screamed loud screams, Paul knowing that in this case her
words meant love. As they stood on Pont St.-Michel, where they had met that day
when they had first found each other again, her screams turned to kisses. And
their love rose and fell.